Marie

AN EPISODE IN THE LIFE OF THE LATE ALLAN QUATERMAIN

by H. Rider Haggard


Contents

 DEDICATION
 PREFACE
 EDITOR’S NOTE

 CHAPTER I. ALLAN LEARNS FRENCH
 CHAPTER II. THE ATTACK ON MARAISFONTEIN
 CHAPTER III. THE RESCUE
 CHAPTER IV. HERNANDO PEREIRA
 CHAPTER V. THE SHOOTING MATCH
 CHAPTER VI. THE PARTING
 CHAPTER VII. ALLAN’S CALL
 CHAPTER VIII. THE CAMP OF DEATH
 CHAPTER IX. THE PROMISE
 CHAPTER X. VROUW PRINSLOO SPEAKS HER MIND
 CHAPTER XI. THE SHOT IN THE KLOOF
 CHAPTER XII. DINGAAN’S BET
 CHAPTER XIII. THE REHEARSAL
 CHAPTER XIV. THE PLAY
 CHAPTER XV. RETIEF ASKS A FAVOUR
 CHAPTER XVI. THE COUNCIL
 CHAPTER XVII. THE MARRIAGE
 CHAPTER XVIII. THE TREATY
 CHAPTER XIX. DEPART IN PEACE
 CHAPTER XX. THE COURT-MARTIAL
 CHAPTER XXI. THE INNOCENT BLOOD




DEDICATION


Ditchingham, 1912.


My dear Sir Henry,—

Nearly thirty-seven years have gone by, more than a generation, since
first we saw the shores of Southern Africa rising from the sea. Since
then how much has happened: the Annexation of the Transvaal, the Zulu
War, the first Boer War, the discovery of the Rand, the taking of
Rhodesia, the second Boer War, and many other matters which in these
quick-moving times are now reckoned as ancient history.

Alas! I fear that were we to re-visit that country we should find but
few faces which we knew. Yet of one thing we may be glad. Those
historical events, in some of which you, as the ruler of Natal, played
a great part, and I, as it chanced, a smaller one, so far as we can
foresee, have at length brought a period of peace to Southern Africa.
To-day the flag of England flies from the Zambesi to the Cape. Beneath
its shadow may all ancient feuds and blood jealousies be forgotten. May
the natives prosper also and be justly ruled, for after all in the
beginning the land was theirs. Such, I know, are your hopes, as they
are mine.

It is, however, with an earlier Africa that this story deals. In 1836,
hate and suspicion ran high between the Home Government and its Dutch
subjects. Owing to the freeing of the slaves and mutual
misunderstandings, the Cape Colony was then in tumult, almost in
rebellion, and the Boers, by thousands, sought new homes in the
unknown, savage-peopled North. Of this blood-stained time I have tried
to tell; of the Great Trek and its tragedies, such as the massacre of
the true-hearted Retief and his companions at the hands of the Zulu
king, Dingaan.

But you have read the tale and know its substance. What, then, remains
for me to say? Only that in memory of long-past days I dedicate it to
you whose image ever springs to mind when I strive to picture an
English gentleman as he should be. Your kindness I never shall forget;
in memory of it, I offer you this book.

Ever sincerely yours,
H. RIDER HAGGARD.


To Sir Henry Bulwer, G.C.M.G.




PREFACE


The Author hopes that the reader may find some historical interest in
the tale set out in these pages of the massacre of the Boer general,
Retief, and his companions at the hands of the Zulu king, Dingaan. Save
for some added circumstances, he believes it to be accurate in its
details.

The same may be said of the account given of the hideous sufferings of
the trek-Boers who wandered into the fever veld, there to perish in the
neighbourhood of Delagoa Bay. Of these sufferings, especially those
that were endured by Triechard and his companions, a few brief
contemporary records still exist, buried in scarce works of reference.
It may be mentioned, also, that it was a common belief among the Boers
of that generation that the cruel death of Retief and his companions,
and other misfortunes which befell them, were due to the treacherous
plottings of an Englishman, or of Englishmen, with the despot, Dingaan.




EDITOR’S NOTE


The following extract explains how the manuscript of “Marie,” and with
it some others, one of which is named “Child of Storm,” came into the
hands of the Editor.

It is from a letter, dated January 17th, 1909, and written by Mr.
George Curtis, the brother of Sir Henry Curtis, Bart., who, it will be
remembered, was one of the late Mr. Allan Quatermain’s friends and
companions in adventure when he discovered King Solomon’s Mines, and
who afterwards disappeared with him in Central Africa.

This extract runs as follows:—

“You may recall that our mutual and dear friend, old Allan Quatermain,
left me the sole executor of his will, which he signed before he set
out with my brother Henry for Zuvendis, where he was killed. The Court,
however, not being satisfied that there was any legal proof of his
death, invested the capital funds in trustee securities, and by my
advice let his place in Yorkshire to a tenant who has remained in
occupation of it during the last two decades. Now that tenant is dead,
and at the earnest prayer of the Charities which benefit under
Quatermain’s will, and of myself—for in my uncertain state of health I
have for long been most anxious to wind up this executorship—about
eight months ago the Court at last consented to the distribution of
this large fund in accordance with the terms of the will.

“This, of course, involved the sale of the real property, and before it
was put up to auction I went over the house in company of the solicitor
appointed by the Court. On the top landing, in the room Quatermain used
to occupy, we found a sealed cupboard that I opened. It proved to be
full of various articles which evidently he had prized because of their
associations with his early life. These I need not enumerate here,
especially as I have reserved them as his residuary legatee and, in the
event of my death, they will pass to you under my will.

“Among these relics, however, I found a stout box, made of some red
foreign wood, that contained various documents and letters and a bundle
of manuscripts. Under the tape which fastened these manuscripts
together, as you will see, is a scrap of paper on which is written, in
blue pencil, a direction signed ‘Allan Quatermain,’ that in the event
of anything happening to him, these MSS. are to be sent to you (for
whom, as you know, he had a high regard), and that at your sole
discretion you are to burn or publish them as you may see fit.

“So, after all these years, as we both remain alive, I carry out our
old friend’s instructions and send you his bequest, which I trust may
prove of interest and value. I have read the MS. called ‘Marie,’ and
certainly am of the opinion that it ought to be published, for I think
it a strange and moving tale of a great love—full, moreover, of
forgotten history.

“That named ‘Child of Storm’ also seems very interesting as a study of
savage life, and the others may be the same; but my eyes are troubling
me so much that I have not been able to decipher them. I hope, however,
that I may be spared long enough to see them in print.

“Poor old Allan Quatermain. It is as though he had suddenly reappeared
from the dead! So at least I thought as I perused these stories of a
period of his life of which I do not remember his speaking to me.

“And now my responsibility in this matter is finished and yours begins.
Do what you like about the manuscripts.”

“George Curtis.”


As may be imagined, I, the Editor, was considerably astonished when I
received this letter and the accompanying bundle of closely-written
MSS. To me also it was as though my old friend had risen from the grave
and once more stood before me, telling some history of his stormy and
tragic past in that quiet, measured voice that I have never been able
to forget.

The first manuscript I read was that entitled “Marie.” It deals with
Mr. Quatermain’s strange experiences when as a very young man he
accompanied the ill-fated Pieter Retief and the Boer Commission on an
embassy to the Zulu despot, Dingaan. This, it will be remembered, ended
in their massacre, Quatermain himself and his Hottentot servant Hans
being the sole survivors of the slaughter. Also it deals with another
matter more personal to himself, namely, his courtship of and marriage
to his first wife, Marie Marais.

Of this Marie I never heard him speak, save once. I remember that on a
certain occasion—it was that of a garden fête for a local charity—I was
standing by Quatermain when someone introduced to him a young girl who
was staying in the neighborhood and had distinguished herself by
singing very prettily at the fête. Her surname I forget, but her
Christian name was Marie. He started when he heard it, and asked if she
were French. The young lady answered No, but only of French extraction
through her grandmother, who also was called Marie.

“Indeed?” he said. “Once I knew a maiden not unlike you who was also of
French extraction and called Marie. May you prove more fortunate in
life than she was, though better or nobler you can never be,” and he
bowed to her in his simple, courtly fashion, then turned away.
Afterwards, when we were alone, I asked him who was this Marie of whom
he had spoken to the young lady. He paused a little, then answered:

“She was my first wife, but I beg you not to speak of her to me or to
anyone else, for I cannot bear to hear her name. Perhaps you will learn
all about her one day.” Then, to my grief and astonishment, he broke
into something like a sob and abruptly left the room.

After reading the record of this Marie I can well understand why he was
so moved. I print it practically as it left his hands.

There are other MSS. also, one of which, headed “Child of Storm,”
relates the moving history of a beautiful and, I fear I must add,
wicked Zulu girl named Mameena who did much evil in her day and went
unrepentant from the world.

Another, amongst other things, tells the secret story of the causes of
the defeat of Cetewayo and his armies by the English in 1879, which
happened not long before Quatermain met Sir Henry Curtis and Captain
Good.

These three narratives are, indeed, more or less connected with each
other. At least, a certain aged dwarf, called Zikali, a witch-doctor
and a terrible man, has to do with all of them, although in the first,
“Marie,” he is only vaguely mentioned in connection with the massacre
of Retief, whereof he was doubtless the primary instigator. As “Marie”
comes first in chronological order, and was placed on the top of the
pile by its author, I publish it first. With the others I hope to deal
later on, as I may find time and opportunity.

But the future must take care of itself. We cannot control it, and its
events are not in our hand. Meanwhile, I hope that those who in their
youth have read of King Solomon’s Mines and Zuvendis, and perhaps some
others who are younger, may find as much of interest in these new
chapters of the autobiography of Allan Quatermain as I have done
myself.




CHAPTER I.
ALLAN LEARNS FRENCH


Although in my old age I, Allan Quatermain, have taken to writing—after
a fashion—never yet have I set down a single word of the tale of my
first love and of the adventures that are grouped around her beautiful
and tragic history. I suppose this is because it has always seemed to
me too holy and far-off a matter—as holy and far-off as is that heaven
which holds the splendid spirit of Marie Marais. But now, in my age,
that which was far-off draws near again; and at night, in the depths
between the stars, sometimes I seem to see the opening doors through
which I must pass, and leaning earthwards across their threshold, with
outstretched arms and dark and dewy eyes, a shadow long forgotten by
all save me—the shadow of Marie Marais.

An old man’s dream, doubtless, no more. Still, I will try to set down
that history which ended in so great a sacrifice, and one so worthy of
record, though I hope that no human eye will read it until I also am
forgotten, or, at any rate, have grown dim in the gathering mists of
oblivion. And I am glad that I have waited to make this attempt, for it
seems to me that only of late have I come to understand and appreciate
at its true value the character of her of whom I tell, and the
passionate affection which was her bounteous offering to one so utterly
unworthy as myself. What have I done, I wonder, that to me should have
been decreed the love of two such women as Marie and that of Stella,
also now long dead, to whom alone in the world I told all her tale? I
remember I feared lest she should take it ill, but this was not so.
Indeed, during our brief married days, she thought and talked much of
Marie, and some of her last words to me were that she was going to seek
her, and that they would wait for me together in the land of love, pure
and immortal.

So with Stella’s death all that side of life came to an end for me,
since during the long years which stretch between then and now I have
never said another tender word to woman. I admit, however, that once,
long afterwards, a certain little witch of a Zulu did say tender words
to me, and for an hour or so almost turned my head, an art in which she
had great skill. This I say because I wish to be quite honest, although
it—I mean my head, for there was no heart involved in the matter—came
straight again at once. Her name was Mameena, and I have set down her
remarkable story elsewhere.

To return. As I have already written in another book, I passed my youth
with my old father, a Church of England clergyman, in what is now the
Cradock district of the Cape Colony.

Then it was a wild place enough, with a very small white population.
Among our few neighbours was a Boer farmer of the name of Henri Marais,
who lived about fifteen miles from our station, on a fine farm called
Maraisfontein. I say he was a Boer, but, as may be guessed from both
his Christian and surname, his origin was Huguenot, his forefather, who
was also named Henri Marais—though I think the Marais was spelt rather
differently then—having been one of the first of that faith who
emigrated to South Africa to escape the cruelties of Louis XIV. at the
time of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes.

Unlike most Boers of similar descent, these particular Marais—for, of
course, there are many other families so called—never forgot their
origin. Indeed, from father to son, they kept up some knowledge of the
French tongue, and among themselves often spoke it after a fashion. At
any rate, it was the habit of Henri Marais, who was excessively
religious, to read his chapter of the Bible (which it is, or was, the
custom of the Boers to spell out every morning, should their learning
allow them to do so), not in the _taal_ or _patois_ Dutch, but in good
old French. I have the very book from which he used to read now, for,
curiously enough, in after years, when all these events had long been
gathered to the past, I chanced to buy it among a parcel of other works
at the weekly auction of odds and ends on the market square of
Maritzburg. I remember that when I opened the great tome, bound over
the original leather boards in buckskin, and discovered to whom it had
belonged, I burst into tears. There was no doubt about it, for, as was
customary in old days, this Bible had sundry fly-leaves sewn up with it
for the purpose of the recording of events important to its owner.

The first entries were made by the original Henri Marais, and record
how he and his compatriots were driven from France, his father having
lost his life in the religious persecutions. After this comes a long
list of births, marriages and deaths continued from generation to
generation, and amongst them a few notes telling of such matters as the
change of the dwelling-places of the family, always in French. Towards
the end of the list appears the entry of the birth of the Henri Marais
whom I knew, alas! too well, and of his only sister. Then is written
his marriage to Marie Labuschagne, also, be it noted, of the Huguenot
stock. In the next year follows the birth of Marie Marais, my Marie,
and, after a long interval, for no other children were born, the death
of her mother. Immediately below appears the following curious passage:

“_Le 3 Janvier, 1836. Je quitte ce pays voulant me sauver du maudit
gouvernement Britannique comme mes ancêtres se sont sauvés de ce
diable—Louis XIV._

“_A bas les rois et les ministres tyrannique! Vive la liberté!_”

Which indicates very clearly the character and the opinions of Henri
Marais, and the feeling among the trek-Boers at that time.

Thus the record closes and the story of the Marais ends—that is, so far
as the writings in the Bible go, for that branch of the family is now
extinct.

Their last chapter I will tell in due course.

There was nothing remarkable about my introduction to Marie Marais. I
did not rescue her from any attack of a wild beast or pull her out of a
raging river in a fashion suited to romance. Indeed, we interchanged
our young ideas across a small and extremely massive table, which, in
fact, had once done duty as a block for the chopping up of meat. To
this hour I can see the hundreds of lines running criss-cross upon its
surface, especially those opposite to where I used to sit.

One day, several years after my father had emigrated to the Cape, the
Heer Marais arrived at our house in search, I think, of some lost oxen.
He was a thin, bearded man with rather wild, dark eyes set close
together, and a quick nervous manner, not in the least like that of a
Dutch Boer—or so I recall him. My father received him courteously and
asked him to stop to dine, which he did.

They talked together in French, a tongue that my father knew well,
although he had not used it for years; Dutch he could not, or, rather,
would not, speak if he could help it, and Mr. Marais preferred not to
talk English. To meet someone who could converse in French delighted
him, and although his version of the language was that of two centuries
before and my father’s was largely derived from reading, they got on
very well together, if not too fast.

At length, after a pause, Mr. Marais, pointing to myself, a small and
stubbly-haired youth with a sharp nose, asked my father whether he
would like me to be instructed in the French tongue. The answer was
that nothing would please him better.

“Although,” he added severely, “to judge by my own experience where
Latin and Greek are concerned, I doubt his capacity to learn anything.”

So an arrangement was made that I should go over for two days in each
week to Maraisfontein, sleeping there on the intervening night, and
acquire a knowledge of the French tongue from a tutor whom Mr. Marais
had hired to instruct his daughter in that language and other subjects.
I remember that my father agreed to pay a certain proportion of this
tutor’s salary, a plan which suited the thrifty Boer very well indeed.

Thither, accordingly, I went in due course, nothing loth, for on the
veld between our station and Maraisfontein many _pauw_ and _koran_—that
is, big and small bustards—were to be found, to say nothing of
occasional buck, and I was allowed to carry a gun, which even in those
days I could use fairly well. So to Maraisfontein I rode on the
appointed day, attended by a Hottentot after-rider, a certain Hans, of
whom I shall have a good deal to tell. I enjoyed very good sport on the
road, arriving at the stead laden with one _pauw_, two _koran_, and a
little _klipspringer_ buck which I had been lucky enough to shoot as it
bounded out of some rocks in front of me.

There was a peach orchard planted round Maraisfontein, which just then
was a mass of lovely pink blossom, and as I rode through it slowly, not
being sure of my way to the house, a lanky child appeared in front of
me, clad in a frock which exactly matched the colour of the peach
bloom. I can see her now, her dark hair hanging down her back, and her
big, shy eyes staring at me from the shadow of the Dutch _kappie_ which
she wore. Indeed, she seemed to be all eyes, like a _dikkop_ or
thick-headed plover; at any rate, I noted little else about her.

I pulled up my pony and stared at her, feeling very shy and not knowing
what to say. For a while she stared back at me, being afflicted,
presumably, with the same complaint, then spoke with an effort, in a
voice that was very soft and pleasant.

“Are you the little Allan Quatermain who is coming to learn French with
me?” she asked in Dutch.

“Of course,” I answered in the same tongue, which I knew well; “but why
do you call me little, missie? I am taller than you,” I added
indignantly, for when I was young my lack of height was always a sore
point with me.

“I think not,” she replied. “But get off that horse, and we will
measure here against this wall.”

So I dismounted, and, having assured herself that I had no heels to my
boots (I was wearing the kind of raw-hide slippers that the Boers call
_veld-shoon_), she took the writing slate which she was carrying—it had
no frame, I remember, being, in fact, but a piece of the material used
for roofing—and, pressing it down tight on my stubbly hair, which stuck
up then as now, made a deep mark in the soft sandstone of the wall with
the hard pointed pencil.

“There,” she said, “that is justly done. Now, little Allan, it is your
turn to measure me.”

So I measured her, and, behold! she was the taller by a whole
half-inch.

“You are standing on tiptoe,” I said in my vexation.

“Little Allan,” she replied, “to stand on tiptoe would be to lie before
the good Lord, and when you come to know me better you will learn that,
though I have a dreadful temper and many other sins, I do not lie.”

I suppose that I looked snubbed and mortified, for she went on in her
grave, grown-up way: “Why are you angry because God made me taller than
you? especially as I am whole months older, for my father told me so.
Come, let us write our names against these marks, so that in a year or
two you may see how you outgrow me.” Then with the slate pencil she
scratched “Marie” against her mark very deeply, so that it might last,
she said; after which I wrote “Allan” against mine.

Alas! Within the last dozen years chance took me past Maraisfontein
once more. The house had long been rebuilt, but this particular wall
yet stood. I rode to it and looked, and there faintly could still be
seen the name Marie, against the little line, and by it the mark that I
had made. My own name and with it subsequent measurements were gone,
for in the intervening forty years or so the sandstone had flaked away
in places. Only her autograph remained, and when I saw it I think that
I felt even worse than I did on finding whose was the old Bible that I
had bought upon the market square at Maritzburg.

I know that I rode away hurriedly without even stopping to inquire into
whose hands the farm had passed. Through the peach orchard I rode,
where the trees—perhaps the same, perhaps others—were once more in
bloom, for the season of the year was that when Marie and I first met,
nor did I draw rein for half a score of miles.

But here I may state that Marie always stayed just half an inch the
taller in body, and how much taller in mind and spirit I cannot tell.

When we had finished our measuring match Marie turned to lead me to the
house, and, pretending to observe for the first time the beautiful
bustard and the two _koran_ hanging from my saddle, also the
_klipspringer_ buck that Hans the Hottentot carried behind him on his
horse, asked:

“Did you shoot all these, Allan Quatermain?”

“Yes,” I answered proudly; “I killed them in four shots, and the _pauw_
and _koran_ were flying, not sitting, which is more than you could have
done, although you are taller, Miss Marie.”

“I do not know,” she answered reflectively. “I can shoot very well with
a rifle, for my father has taught me, but I never would shoot at living
things unless I must because I was hungry, for I think that to kill is
cruel. But, of course, it is different with men,” she added hastily,
“and no doubt you will be a great hunter one day, Allan Quatermain,
since you can already aim so well.”

“I hope so,” I answered, blushing at the compliment, “for I love
hunting, and when there are so many wild things it does not matter if
we kill a few. I shot these for you and your father to eat.”

“Come, then, and give them to him. He will thank you,” and she led the
way through the gate in the sandstone wall into the yard, where the
outbuildings stood in which the riding horses and the best of the
breeding cattle were kept at night, and so past the end of the long,
one-storied house, that was stone-built and whitewashed, to the stoep
or veranda in front of it.

On the broad stoep, which commanded a pleasant view over rolling,
park-like country, where mimosa and other trees grew in clumps, two men
were seated, drinking strong coffee, although it was not yet ten
o’clock in the morning.

Hearing the sound of the horses, one of these, Mynheer Marais, whom I
already knew, rose from his hide-strung chair. He was, as I think I
have said, not in the least like one of the phlegmatic Boers, either in
person or in temperament, but, rather, a typical Frenchman, although no
member of his race had set foot in France for a hundred and fifty
years. At least so I discovered afterwards, for, of course, in those
days I knew nothing of Frenchmen.

His companion was also French, Leblanc by name, but of a very different
stamp. In person he was short and stout. His large head was bald except
for a fringe of curling, iron-grey hair which grew round it just above
the ears and fell upon his shoulders, giving him the appearance of a
tonsured but dishevelled priest. His eyes were blue and watery, his
mouth was rather weak, and his cheeks were pale, full and flabby. When
the Heer Marais rose, I, being an observant youth, noted that Monsieur
Leblanc took the opportunity to stretch out a rather shaky hand and
fill up his coffee cup out of a black bottle, which from the smell I
judged to contain peach brandy.

In fact, it may as well be said at once that the poor man was a
drunkard, which explains how he, with all his high education and great
ability, came to hold the humble post of tutor on a remote Boer farm.
Years before, when under the influence of drink, he had committed some
crime in France—I don’t know what it was, and never inquired—and fled
to the Cape to avoid prosecution. Here he obtained a professorship at
one of the colleges, but after a while appeared in the lecture-room
quite drunk and lost his employment. The same thing happened in other
towns, till at last he drifted to distant Maraisfontein, where his
employer tolerated his weakness for the sake of the intellectual
companionship for which something in his own nature seemed to crave.
Also, he looked upon him as a compatriot in distress, and a great bond
of union between them was their mutual and virulent hatred of England
and the English, which in the case of Monsieur Leblanc, who in his
youth had fought at Waterloo and been acquainted with the great
Emperor, was not altogether unnatural.

Henri Marais’s case was different, but of that I shall have more to say
later.

“Ah, Marie,” said her father, speaking in Dutch, “so you have found him
at last,” and he nodded towards me, adding: “You should be flattered,
little man. Look you, this missie has been sitting for two hours in the
sun waiting for you, although I told her you would not arrive much
before ten o’clock, as your father the _prédicant_ said you would
breakfast before you started. Well, it is natural, for she is lonely
here, and you are of an age, although of a different race”; and his
face darkened as he spoke the words.

“Father,” answered Marie, whose blushes I could see even in the shadow
of her cap, “I was not sitting in the sun, but under the shade of a
peach tree. Also, I was working out the sums that Monsieur Leblanc set
me on my slate. See, here they are,” and she held up the slate, which
was covered with figures, somewhat smudged, it is true, by the rubbing
of my stiff hair and of her cap.

Then Monsieur Leblanc broke in, speaking in French, of which, as it
chanced I understood the sense, for my father had grounded me in that
tongue, and I am naturally quick at modern languages. At any rate, I
made out that he was asking if I was the little _cochon d’anglais_, or
English pig, whom for his sins he had to teach. He added that he judged
I must be, as my hair stuck up on my head—I had taken off my hat out of
politeness—as it naturally would do on a pig’s back.

This was too much for me, so, before either of the others could speak,
I answered in Dutch, for rage made me eloquent and bold:

“Yes, I am he; but, mynheer, if you are to be my master, I hope you
will not call the English pigs any more to me.”

“Indeed, _gamin_” (that is, little scamp), “and pray, what will happen
if I am so bold as to repeat that truth?”

“I think, mynheer,” I replied, growing white with rage at this new
insult, “the same that has happened to yonder buck,” and I pointed to
the _klipspringer_ behind Hans’s saddle. “I mean that I shall shoot
you.”

“_Peste! Au moins il a du courage, cet enfant_” (At least the child is
plucky), exclaimed Monsieur Leblanc, astonished. From that moment, I
may add, he respected me, and never again insulted my country to my
face.

Then Marais broke out, speaking in Dutch that I might understand:

“It is you who should be called pig, Leblanc, not this boy, for, early
as it is, you have been drinking. Look! the brandy bottle is half
empty. Is that the example you set to the young? Speak so again and I
turn you out to starve on the veld. Allan Quatermain, although, as you
may have heard, I do not like the English, I beg your pardon. I hope
you will forgive the words this sot spoke, thinking that you did not
understand,” and he took off his hat and bowed to me quite in a grand
manner, as his ancestors might have done to a king of France.

Leblanc’s face fell. Then he rose and walked away rather unsteadily; as
I learned afterwards, to plunge his head in a tub of cold water and
swallow a pint of new milk, which were his favourite antidotes after
too much strong drink. At any rate, when he appeared again, half an
hour later, to begin our lesson, he was quite sober, and extremely
polite.

When he had gone, my childish anger being appeased, I presented the
Heer Marais with my father’s compliments, also with the buck and the
birds, whereof the latter seemed to please him more than the former.
Then my saddle-bags were taken to my room, a little cupboard of a place
next to that occupied by Monsieur Leblanc, and Hans was sent to turn
the horses out with the others belonging to the farm, having first
knee-haltered them tightly, so that they should not run away home.

This done, the Heer Marais showed me the room in which we were to have
our lessons, one of the _sitkammer_, or sitting chambers, whereof,
unlike most Boer steads, this house boasted two. I remember that the
floor was made of _daga_, that is, ant-heap earth mixed with cow-dung,
into which thousands of peach-stones had been thrown while it was still
soft, in order to resist footwear—a rude but fairly efficient
expedient, and one not unpleasing to the eye. For the rest, there was
one window opening on to the veranda, which, in that bright climate,
admitted a shaded but sufficient light, especially as it always stood
open; the ceiling was of unplastered reeds; a large bookcase stood in
the corner containing many French works, most of them the property of
Monsieur Leblanc, and in the centre of the room was the strong, rough
table made of native yellow-wood, that once had served as a butcher’s
block. I recollect also a coloured print of the great Napoleon
commanding at some battle in which he was victorious, seated upon a
white horse and waving a field-marshal’s baton over piles of dead and
wounded; and near the window, hanging to the reeds of the ceiling, the
nest of a pair of red-tailed swallows, pretty creatures that,
notwithstanding the mess they made, afforded to Marie and me endless
amusement in the intervals of our work.

When, on that day, I shuffled shyly into this homely place, and,
thinking myself alone there, fell to examining it, suddenly I was
brought to a standstill by a curious choking sound which seemed to
proceed from the shadows behind the bookcase. Wondering as to its
cause, I advanced cautiously to discover a pink-clad shape standing in
the corner like a naughty child, with her head resting against the
wall, and sobbing slowly.

“Marie Marais, why do you cry?” I asked.

She turned, tossing back the locks of long, black hair which hung about
her face, and answered:

“Allan Quatermain, I cry because of the shame which has been put upon
you and upon our house by that drunken Frenchman.”

“What of that?” I asked. “He only called me a pig, but I think I have
shown him that even a pig has tusks.”

“Yes,” she replied, “but it was not you he meant; it was all the
English, whom he hates; and the worst of it is that my father is of his
mind. He, too, hates the English, and, oh! I am sure that trouble will
come of his hatred, trouble and death to many.”

“Well, if so, we have nothing to do with it, have we?” I replied with
the cheerfulness of extreme youth.

“What makes you so sure?” she said solemnly. “Hush! here comes Monsieur
Leblanc.”




CHAPTER II.
THE ATTACK ON MARAISFONTEIN


I do not propose to set out the history of the years which I spent in
acquiring a knowledge of French and various other subjects, under the
tuition of the learned but prejudiced Monsieur Leblanc. Indeed, there
is “none to tell, sir.” When Monsieur Leblanc was sober, he was a most
excellent and well-informed tutor, although one apt to digress into
many side issues, which in themselves were not uninstructive. When
tipsy, he grew excited and harangued us, generally upon politics and
religion, or rather its reverse, for he was an advanced freethinker,
although this was a side to his character which, however intoxicated he
might be, he always managed to conceal from the Heer Marais. I may add
that a certain childish code of honour prevented us from betraying his
views on this and sundry other matters. When absolutely drunk, which,
on an average, was not more than once a month, he simply slept, and we
did what we pleased—a fact which our childish code of honour also
prevented us from betraying.

But, on the whole, we got on very well together, for, after the
incident of our first meeting, Monsieur Leblanc was always polite to
me. Marie he adored, as did every one about the place, from her father
down to the meanest slave. Need I add that I adored her more than all
of them put together, first with the love that some children have for
each other, and afterwards, as we became adult, with that wider love by
which it is at once transcended and made complete. Strange would it
have been if this were not so, seeing that we spent nearly half of
every week practically alone together, and that, from the first, Marie,
whose nature was as open as the clear noon, never concealed her
affection for me. True, it was a very discreet affection, almost
sisterly, or even motherly, in its outward and visible aspects, as
though she could never forget that extra half-inch of height or month
or two of age.

Moreover, from a child she was a woman, as an Irishman might say, for
circumstances and character had shaped her thus. Not much more than a
year before we met, her mother, whose only child she was, and whom she
loved with all her strong and passionate heart, died after a lingering
illness, leaving her in charge of her father and his house. I think it
was this heavy bereavement in early youth which coloured her nature
with a grey tinge of sadness and made her seem so much older than her
years.

So the time went on, I worshipping Marie in my secret thought, but
saying nothing about it, and Marie talking of and acting towards me as
though I were her dear younger brother. Nobody, not even her father or
mine, or Monsieur Leblanc, took the slightest notice of this queer
relationship, or seemed to dream that it might lead to ultimate
complications which, in fact, would have been very distasteful to them
all for reasons that I will explain.

Needless to say, in due course, as they were bound to do, those
complications arose, and under pressure of great physical and moral
excitement the truth came out. It happened thus.

Every reader of the history of the Cape Colony has heard of the great
Kaffir War of 1835. That war took place for the most part in the
districts of Albany and Somerset, so that we inhabitants of Cradock, on
the whole, suffered little. Therefore, with the natural optimism and
carelessness of danger of dwellers in wild places, we began to think
ourselves fairly safe from attack. Indeed, so we should have been, had
it not been for a foolish action on the part of Monsieur Leblanc.

It seems that on a certain Sunday, a day that I always spent at home
with my father, Monsieur Leblanc rode out alone to some hills about
five miles distant from Maraisfontein. He had often been cautioned that
this was an unsafe thing to do, but the truth is that the foolish man
thought he had found a rich copper mine in these hills, and was anxious
that no one should share his secret. Therefore, on Sundays, when there
were no lessons, and the Heer Marais was in the habit of celebrating
family prayers, which Leblanc disliked, it was customary for him to
ride to these hills and there collect geological specimens and locate
the strike of his copper vein. On this particular Sabbath, which was
very hot, after he had done whatever he intended to do, he dismounted
from his horse, a tame old beast. Leaving it loose, he partook of the
meal he had brought with him, which seems to have included a bottle of
peach brandy that induced slumber.

Waking up towards evening, he found that his horse had gone, and at
once jumped to the conclusion that it had been stolen by Kaffirs,
although in truth the animal had but strolled over a ridge in search of
grass. Running hither and thither to seek it, he presently crossed this
ridge and met the horse, apparently being led away by two of the Red
Kaffirs, who, as was usual, were armed with assegais. As a matter of
fact these men had found the beast, and, knowing well to whom it
belonged, were seeking its owner, whom, earlier in the day, they had
seen upon the hills, in order to restore it to him. This, however,
never occurred to the mind of Monsieur Leblanc, excited as it was by
the fumes of the peach brandy.

Lifting the double-barrelled gun he carried, he fired at the first
Kaffir, a young man who chanced to be the eldest son and heir of the
chief of the tribe, and, as the range was very close, shot him dead.
Thereon his companion, leaving go of the horse, ran for his life. At
him Leblanc fired also, wounding him slightly in the thigh, but no
more, so that he escaped to tell the tale of what he and every other
native for miles round considered a wanton and premeditated murder. The
deed done, the fiery old Frenchman mounted his nag and rode quietly
home. On the road, however, as the peach brandy evaporated from his
brain, doubts entered it, with the result that he determined to say
nothing of his adventure to Henri Marais, who he knew was particularly
anxious to avoid any cause of quarrel with the Kaffirs.

So he kept his own counsel and went to bed. Before he was up next
morning the Heer Marais, suspecting neither trouble nor danger, had
ridden off to a farm thirty miles or more away to pay its owner for
some cattle which he had recently bought, leaving his home and his
daughter quite unprotected, except by Leblanc and the few native
servants, who were really slaves, that lived about the place.

Now on the Monday night I went to bed as usual, and slept, as I have
always done through life, like a top, till about four in the morning,
when I was awakened by someone tapping at the glass of my window.
Slipping from the bed, I felt for my pistol, as it was quite dark,
crept to the window, opened it, and keeping my head below the level of
the sill, fearing lest its appearance should be greeted with an
assegai, asked who was there.

“Me, baas,” said the voice of Hans, our Hottentot servant, who, it will
be remembered, had accompanied me as after-rider when first I went to
Maraisfontein. “I have bad news. Listen. The baas knows that I have
been out searching for the red cow which was lost. Well, I found her,
and was sleeping by her side under a tree on the veld when, about two
hours ago, a woman whom I know came up to my camp fire and woke me. I
asked her what she was doing at that hour of the night, and she
answered that she had come to tell me something. She said that some
young men of the tribe of the chief Quabie, who lives in the hills
yonder, had been visiting at their kraal, and that a few hours before a
messenger had arrived from the chief saying that they must return at
once, as this morning at dawn he and all his men were going to attack
Maraisfontein and kill everyone in it and take the cattle!”

“Good God!” I ejaculated. “Why?”

“Because, young baas,” drawled the Hottentot from the other side of the
window, “because someone from Maraisfontein—I think it was the Vulture”
(the natives gave this name to Leblanc on account of his bald head and
hooked nose)—“shot Quabie’s son on Sunday when he was holding his
horse.”

“Good God!” I said again, “the old fool must have been drunk. When did
you say the attack was to be—at dawn?” and I glanced at the stars,
adding, “Why, that will be within less than an hour, and the Baas
Marais is away.”

“Yes,” croaked Hans; “and Missie Marie—think of what the Red Kaffirs
will do with Missie Marie when their blood is up.”

I thrust my fist through the window and struck the Hottentot’s
toad-like face on which the starlight gleamed faintly.

“Dog!” I said, “saddle my mare and the roan horse and get your gun. In
two minutes I come. Be swift or I kill you.”

“I go,” he answered, and shot out into the night like a frightened
snake.

Then I began to dress, shouting as I dressed, till my father and the
Kaffirs ran into the room. As I threw on my things I told them all.

“Send out messengers,” I said, “to Marais—he is at Botha’s farm—and to
all the neighbours. Send, for your lives; gather up the friendly
Kaffirs and ride like hell for Maraisfontein. Don’t talk to me, father;
don’t talk! Go and do what I tell you. Stay! Give me two guns, fill the
saddle-bags with powder tins and _loopers_, and tie them to my mare.
Oh! be quick, be quick!”

Now at length they understood, and flew this way and that with candles
and lanterns. Two minutes later—it could scarcely have been more—I was
in front of the stables just as Hans led out the bay mare, a famous
beast that for two years I had saved all my money to buy. Someone
strapped on the saddle-bags while I tested the girths; someone else
appeared with the stout roan stallion that I knew would follow the mare
to the death. There was not time to saddle him, so Hans clambered on to
his back like a monkey, holding two guns under his arm, for I carried
but one and my double-barrelled pistol.

“Send off the messengers,” I shouted to my father. “If you would see me
again send them swiftly, and follow with every man you can raise.”

Then we were away with fifteen miles to do and five-and-thirty minutes
before the dawn.

“Softly up the slope,” I said to Hans, “till the beasts get their wind,
and then ride as you never rode before.”

Those first two miles of rising ground! I thought we should never come
to the end of them, and yet I dared not let the mare out lest she
should bucket herself. Happily she and her companion, the stallion—a
most enduring horse, though not so very swift—had stood idle for the
last thirty hours, and, of course, had not eaten or drunk since sunset.
Therefore being in fine fettle, they were keen for the business; also
we were light weights.

I held in the mare as she spurted up the rise, and the horse kept his
pace to hers. We reached its crest, and before us lay the great level
plain, eleven miles of it, and then two miles down hill to
Maraisfontein.

“Now,” I said to Hans, shaking loose the reins, “keep up if you can!”

Away sped the mare till the keen air of the night sung past my ears,
and behind her strained the good roan horse with the Hottentot monkey
on its back. Oh! what a ride was that!

Further I have gone for a like cause, but never at such speed, for I
knew the strength of the beasts and how long it would last them. Half
an hour of it they might endure; more, and at this pace they must
founder or die.

And yet such was the agony of my fear, that it seemed to me as though I
only crept along the ground like a tortoise.

The roan was left behind, the sound of his foot-beats died away, and I
was alone with the night and my fear. Mile added itself to mile, for
now and again the starlight showed me a stone or the skeleton of some
dead beast that I knew. Once I dashed into a herd of trekking game so
suddenly, that a springbok, unable to stop itself, leapt right over me.
Once the mare put her foot in an ant-bear hole and nearly fell, but
recovered herself—thanks be to God, unharmed—and I worked myself back
into the saddle whence I had been almost shaken. If I had fallen; oh!
if I had fallen!

We were near the end of the flat, and she began to fail. I had
over-pressed her; the pace was too tremendous. Her speed lessened to an
ordinary fast gallop as she faced the gentle rise that led to the brow.
And now, behind me, once more I heard the sound of the hoofs of the
roan. The tireless beast was coming up. By the time we reached the edge
of the plateau he was quite near, not fifty yards behind, for I heard
him whinny faintly.

Then began the descent. The morning star was setting, the east grew
grey with light. Oh! could we get there before the dawn? Could we get
there before the dawn? That is what my horse’s hoofs beat out to me.

Now I could see the mass of the trees about the stead. And now I dashed
into something, though until I was through it, I did not know that it
was a line of men, for the faint light gleamed upon the spear of one of
them who had been overthrown!

So it was no lie! The Kaffirs were there! As I thought it, a fresh
horror filled my heart; perhaps their murdering work was already done
and they were departing.

The minute of suspense—or was it but seconds?—seemed an eternity. But
it ended at last. Now I was at the door in the high wall that enclosed
the outbuildings at the back of the house, and there, by an
inspiration, pulled up the mare—glad enough she was to stop, poor
thing—for it occurred to me that if I rode to the front I should very
probably be assegaied and of no further use. I tried the door, which
was made of stout stinkwood planks. By design, or accident, it had been
left unbolted. As I thrust it open Hans arrived with a rush, clinging
to the roan with his face hidden in its mane. The beast pulled up by
the side of the mare which it had been pursuing, and in the faint light
I saw that an assegai was fixed in its flank.

Five seconds later we were in the yard and locking and barring the door
behind us. Then, snatching the saddle-bags of ammunition from the
horses, we left them standing there, and I ran for the back entrance of
the house, bidding Hans rouse the natives, who slept in the
outbuildings, and follow with them. If any one of them showed signs of
treachery he was to shoot him at once. I remember that as I went I tore
the spear out of the stallion’s flank and brought it away with me.

Now I was hammering upon the back door of the house, which I could not
open. After a pause that seemed long, a window was thrown wide, and a
voice—it was Marie’s—asked in frightened tones who was there.

“I, Allan Quatermain,” I answered. “Open at once, Marie. You are in
great danger; the Red Kaffirs are going to attack the house.”

She flew to the door in her nightdress, and at length I was in the
place.

“Thank God! you are still safe,” I gasped. “Put on your clothes while I
call Leblanc. No, stay, do you call him; I must wait here for Hans and
your slaves.”

Away she sped without a word, and presently Hans arrived, bringing with
him eight frightened men, who as yet scarcely knew whether they slept
or woke.

“Is that all?” I asked. “Then bar the door and follow me to the
_sitkammer_, where the baas keeps his guns.”

Just as we reached it, Leblanc entered, clad in his shirt and trousers,
and was followed presently by Marie with a candle.

“What is it?” he asked.

I took the candle from Marie’s hand, and set it on the floor close to
the wall, lest it should prove a target for an assegai or a bullet.
Even in those days the Kaffirs had a few firearms, for the most part
captured or stolen from white men. Then in a few words I told them all.

“And when did you learn all this?” asked Leblanc in French.

“At the Mission Station a little more than half an hour ago,” I
answered, looking at my watch.

“At the station a little more than half an hour ago! _Peste!_ it is not
possible. You dream or are drunken,” he cried excitedly.

“All right, monsieur, we will argue afterwards,” I answered. “Meanwhile
the Kaffirs are here, for I rode through them; and if you want to save
your life, stop talking and act. Marie, how many guns are there?”

“Four,” she answered, “of my father’s; two _roers_ and two smaller
ones.”

“And how many of these men”—and I pointed to the Kaffirs—“can shoot?”

“Three well and one badly, Allan.”

“Good,” I said. “Let them load the guns with _loopers_”—that is, slugs,
not bullets—“and let the rest stand in the passage with their assegais,
in case the Quabies should try to force the back door.”

Now, in this house there were in all but six windows, one to each
sitting-room, one to each of the larger bedrooms, these four opening on
to the veranda, and one at either end of the house, to give light and
air to the two small bedrooms, which were approached through the larger
bedrooms. At the back, fortunately, there were no windows, for the
stead was but one room deep with a passage running from the front to
the back door, a distance of little over fifteen feet.

As soon as the guns were loaded I divided up the men, a man with a gun
at each window. The right-hand sitting-room window I took myself with
two guns, Marie coming with me to load, which, like all girls in that
wild country, she could do well enough. So we arranged ourselves in a
rough-and-ready fashion, and while we were doing it felt quite
cheerful—that is, all except Monsieur Leblanc, who, I noticed, seemed
very much disturbed.

I do not for one moment mean to suggest that he was afraid, as he might
well have been, for he was an extremely brave and even rash man; but I
think the knowledge that his drunken act had brought this terrible
danger upon us all weighed on his mind. Also there may have been more;
some subtle fore-knowledge of the approaching end to a life that, when
all allowances were made, could scarcely be called well spent. At any
rate he fidgeted at his window-place cursing beneath his breath, and
soon, as I saw out of the corner of my eye, began to have recourse to
his favourite bottle of peach brandy, which he fetched out of a
cupboard.

The slaves, too, were gloomy, as all natives are when suddenly awakened
in the night; but as the light grew they became more cheerful. It is a
poor Kaffir that does not love fighting, especially when he has a gun
and a white man or two to lead him.

Now that we had made such little preparations as we could, which, by
the way, I supplemented by causing some furniture to be piled up
against the front and back doors, there came a pause, which, speaking
for my own part—being, after all, only a lad at the time—I found very
trying to the nerves. There I stood at my window with the two guns, one
a double-barrel and one a single _roer_, or elephant gun, that took a
tremendous charge, but both, be it remembered, flint locks; for,
although percussion caps had been introduced, we were a little behind
the times in Cradock. There, too, crouched on the ground beside me,
holding the ammunition ready for re-loading, her long, black hair
flowing about her shoulders, was Marie Marais, now a well-grown young
woman. In the intense silence she whispered to me:

“Why did you come here, Allan? You were safe yonder, and now you will
probably be killed.”

“To try to save you,” I answered simply. “What would you have had me
do?”

“To try to save me? Oh! that is good of you, but you should have
thought of yourself.”

“Then I should still have thought of you, Marie.”

“Why, Allan?”

“Because you are myself and more than myself. If anything happened to
you, what would my life be to me?”

“I don’t quite understand, Allan,” she replied, staring down at the
floor. “Tell me, what do you mean?”

“Mean, you silly girl,” I said; “what can I mean, except that I love
you, which I thought you knew long ago.”

“Oh!” she said; “_now_ I understand.” Then she raised herself upon her
knees, and held up her face to me to kiss, adding, “There, that’s my
answer, the first and perhaps the last. Thank you, Allan dear; I am
glad to have heard that, for you see one or both of us may die soon.”

As she spoke the words, an assegai flashed through the window-place,
passing just between our heads. So we gave over love-making and turned
our attention to war.

Now the light was beginning to grow, flowing out of the pearly eastern
sky; but no attack had yet been delivered, although that one was
imminent that spear fixed in the plaster of the wall behind us showed
clearly. Perhaps the Kaffirs had been frightened by the galloping of
horses through their line in the dark, not knowing how many of them
there might have been. Or perhaps they were waiting to see better where
to deliver their onset. These were the ideas that occurred to me, but
both were wrong.

They were staying their hands until the mist lifted a little from the
hollow below the stead where the cattle kraals were situated, for while
the fog remained they could not see to get the beasts out. These they
wished to make sure of and drive away before the fight began, lest
during its progress something should happen to rob them of their booty.

Presently, from these kraals, where the Heer Marais’s horned beasts and
sheep were penned at night, about one hundred and fifty of the former
and some two thousand of the latter, to say nothing of the horses, for
he was a large and prosperous farmer, there arose a sound of bellowing,
neighing, and baaing, and with it that of the shouting of men.

“They are driving off the stock,” said Marie. “Oh! my poor father, he
is ruined; it will break his heart.”

“Bad enough,” I answered, “but there are things that might be worse.
Hark!”

As I spoke there came a sound of stamping feet and of a wild war chant.
Then in the edge of the mist that hung above the hollow where the
cattle kraals were, figures appeared, moving swiftly to and fro,
looking ghostly and unreal. The Kaffirs were marshalling their men for
the attack. A minute more and it had begun. On up the slope they came
in long, wavering lines, several hundreds of them, whistling and
screaming, shaking their spears, their war-plumes and hair trappings
blown back by the breeze, the lust of slaughter in their rolling eyes.
Two or three of them had guns, which they fired as they ran, but where
the bullets went I do not know, over the house probably.

I called out to Leblanc and the Kaffirs not to shoot till I did, for I
knew that they were poor marksmen and that much depended upon our first
volley being effective. Then as the captain of this attack came within
thirty yards of the stoep—for now the light, growing swiftly, was
strong enough to enable me to distinguish him by his apparel and the
rifle which he held—I loosed at him with the _roer_ and shot him dead.
Indeed the heavy bullet passing through his body mortally wounded
another of the Quabies behind. These were the first men that I ever
killed in war.

As they fell, Leblanc and the rest of our people fired also, the slugs
from their guns doing great execution at that range, which was just
long enough to allow them to scatter. When the smoke cleared a little I
saw that nearly a dozen men were down, and that the rest, dismayed by
this reception, had halted. If they had come on then, while we were
loading, doubtless they might have rushed the place; but, being unused
to the terrible effects of firearms, they paused, amazed. A number of
them, twenty or thirty perhaps, clustered about the bodies of the
fallen Kaffirs, and, seizing my second gun, I fired both barrels at
these with such fearful effect that the whole regiment took to their
heels and fled, leaving their dead and wounded on the ground. As they
ran our servants cheered, but I called to them to be silent and load
swiftly, knowing well that the enemy would soon return.

For a time, however, nothing happened, although we could hear them
talking somewhere near the cattle kraal, about a hundred and fifty
yards away. Marie took advantage of this pause, I remember, to fetch
food and distribute it among us. I, for one, was glad enough to get it.

Now the sun was up, a sight for which I thanked Heaven, for, at any
rate, we could no longer be surprised. Also, with the daylight, some of
my fear passed away, since darkness always makes danger twice as
terrible to man and beast. Whilst we were still eating and fortifying
the window-places as best we could, so as to make them difficult to
enter, a single Kaffir appeared, waving above his head a stick to which
was tied a white ox-tail as a sign of truce. I ordered that no one
should fire, and when the man, who was a bold fellow, had reached the
spot where the dead captain lay, called to him, asking his business,
for I could speak his language well.

He answered that he had come with a message from Quabie. This was the
message: that Quabie’s eldest son had been cruelly murdered by the fat
white man called “Vulture” who lived with the Heer Marais, and that he,
Quabie, would have blood for blood. Still, he did not wish to kill the
young white chieftainess (that was Marie) or the others in the house,
with whom he had no quarrel. Therefore if we would give up the fat
white man that he might make him “die slowly,” Quabie would be content
with his life and with the cattle that he had already taken by way of a
fine, and leave us and the house unmolested.

Now, when Leblanc understood the nature of this offer he went perfectly
mad with mingled fear and rage, and began to shout and swear in French.

“Be silent,” I said; “we do not mean to surrender you, although you
have brought all this trouble on us. Your chance of life is as good as
ours. Are you not ashamed to act so before these black people?”

When at last he grew more or less quiet I called to the messenger that
we white folk were not in the habit of abandoning each other, and that
we would live or die together. Still, I bade him tell Quabie that if we
did die, the vengeance taken on him and all his people would be to wipe
them out till not one of them was left, and therefore that he would do
well not to cause any of our blood to flow. Also, I added, that we had
thirty men in the house (which, of course, was a lie) and plenty of
ammunition and food, so that if he chose to continue the attack it
would be the worse for him and his tribe.

On hearing this the herald shouted back that we should every one of us
be dead before noon if he had his way. Still, he would report my words
faithfully to Quabie and bring his answer.

Then he turned and began to walk off. Just as he did so a shot was
fired from the house, and the man pitched forward to the ground, then
rose again and staggered back towards his people, with his right
shoulder shattered and his arm swinging.

“Who did that?” I asked through the smoke, which prevented me from
seeing.

“I, _parbleu!_” shouted Leblanc. “_Sapristi!_ that black devil wanted
to torture me, Leblanc, the friend of the great Napoleon. Well, at
least I have tortured him whom I meant to kill.”

“Yes, you fool,” I answered; “and we, too, shall be tortured because of
your wickedness. You have shot a messenger carrying a flag of truce,
and that the Quabies will never forgive. Oh! I tell you that you have
hit us as well as him, who had it not been for you might have been
spared.”

These words I said quite quietly and in Dutch, so that our Kaffirs
might understand them, though really I was boiling with wrath.

But Leblanc did not answer quietly.

“Who are you,” he shouted, “you wretched little Englishman, who dare to
lecture me, Leblanc, the friend of the great Napoleon?”

Now I drew my pistol and walked up to the man.

“Be quiet, you drunken sot,” I said, for I guessed that he had drunk
more of the brandy in the darkness. “If you are not quiet and do not
obey me, who am in command here, either I will blow your brains out, or
I will give you to these men,” and I pointed to Hans and the Kaffirs,
who had gathered round him, muttering ominously. “Do you know what they
will do with you? They will throw you out of the house, and leave you
to settle your quarrel with Quabie alone.”

Leblanc looked first at the pistol, and next at the faces of the
natives, and saw something in one or other of them, or in both, that
caused him to change his note.

“Pardon, monsieur,” he said; “I was excited. I knew not what I said. If
you are young you are brave and clever, and I will obey you,” and he
went to his station and began to re-load his gun. As he did so a great
shout of fury rose from the cattle kraal. The wounded herald had
reached the Quabies and was telling them of the treachery of the white
people.




CHAPTER III.
THE RESCUE


The second Quabie advance did not begin till about half-past seven.
Even savages love their lives and appreciate the fact that wounds hurt
very much, and these were no exception to the rule. Their first rush
had taught them a bitter lesson, of which the fruit was evident in the
crippled or dying men who rolled to and fro baked in the hot sun within
a few yards of the stoep, not to speak of those who would never stir
again. Now, the space around the house being quite open and bare of
cover, it was obvious that it could not be stormed without further
heavy losses. In order to avoid such losses a civilised people would
have advanced by means of trenches, but of these the Quabies knew
nothing; moreover, digging tools were lacking to them.

So it came about that they hit upon another, and in the circumstances a
not inefficient expedient. The cattle kraal was built of rough,
unmortared stones. Those stones they took, each man carrying two or
three, which, rushing forward, they piled up into scattered rough
defences of about eighteen inches or two feet high. These defences were
instantly occupied by as many warriors as could take shelter behind
them, lying one on top of the other. Of course, those savages who
carried the first stones were exposed to our fire, with the result that
many of them fell, but there were always plenty more behind. As they
were being built at a dozen different points, and we had but seven
guns, before we could reload, a particular _schanz_, of which perhaps
the first builders had fallen, would be raised so high that our slugs
could no longer hurt those who lay behind it. Also, our supply of
ammunition was limited, and the constant expenditure wasted it so much
that at length only about six charges per man remained. At last,
indeed, I was obliged to order the firing to cease, so that we might
reserve ourselves for the great rush which could not now be much
delayed.

Finding that they were no longer harassed by our bullets, the Quabies
advanced more rapidly, directing their attack upon the south end of the
house, where there was but one window, and thus avoiding the fire that
might be poured upon them from the various openings under the veranda.
At first I wondered why they selected this end, till Marie reminded me
that this part of the dwelling was thatched with reeds, whereas the
rest of the building, which had been erected more recently, was slated.

Their object was to fire the roof. So soon as their last wall was near
enough (that is, about half-past ten of the clock) they began to throw
into the thatch assegais to which were attached bunches of burning
grass. Many of these went out, but at length, as we gathered from their
shouts, one caught. Within ten minutes this part of the house was
burning.

Now our state became desperate. We retreated across the central
passage, fearing lest the blazing rafters should fall upon our natives,
who were losing heart and would no longer stay beneath them. But the
Quabies, more bold, clambered in through the south window, and attacked
us in the doorway of the larger sitting-room.

Here the final fight began. As they rushed at us we shot, till they
went down in heaps. Almost at our last charge they gave back, and just
then the roof fell upon them.

Oh, what a terrible scene was that! The dense clouds of smoke, the
screams of the trapped and burning men, the turmoil, the agony!

The front door was burst in by a flank onslaught.

Leblanc and a slave who was near him were seized by black, claw-like
hands and dragged out. What became of the Frenchman I do not know, for
the natives hauled him away, but I fear his end must have been
dreadful, as he was taken alive. The servant I saw them assegai, so at
least he died at once. I fired my last shot, killing a fellow who was
flourishing a battle-axe, then dashed the butt of the gun into the face
of the man behind him, felling him, and, seizing Marie by the hand,
dragged her back into the northernmost room—that in which I was
accustomed to sleep—and shut and barred the door.

“Allan,” she gasped, “Allan dear, it is finished. I cannot fall into
the hands of those men. Kill me, Allan.”

“All right,” I answered, “I will. I have my pistol. One barrel for you
and one for me.”

“No, no! Perhaps you might escape after all; but, you see, I am a
woman, and dare not risk it. Come now, I am ready,” and she knelt down,
opening her arms to receive the embrace of death, and looked up at me
with her lovely, pitiful eyes.

“It doesn’t do to kill one’s love and live on oneself,” I answered
hoarsely. “We have got to go together,” and I cocked both barrels of
the pistol.

The Hottentot, Hans, who was in the place with us, saw and understood.

“It is right, it is best!” he said; and turning, he hid his eyes with
his hand.

“Wait a little, Allan,” she exclaimed; “it will be time when the door
is down, and perhaps God may still help us.”

“He may,” I answered doubtfully; “but I would not count on it. Nothing
can save us now unless the others come to rescue us, and that’s too
much to hope for.”

Then a thought struck me, and I added with a dreadful laugh: “I wonder
where we shall be in five minutes.”

“Oh! together, dear; together for always in some new and beautiful
world, for you do love me, don’t you, as I love you? Maybe that’s
better than living on here where we should be sure to have troubles and
perhaps be separated at last.”

I nodded my head, for though I loved life, I loved Marie more, and I
felt that we were making a good end after a brave fight. They were
battering at the door now, but, thank Heaven, Marais had made strong
doors, and it held a while.

The wood began to give at last, an assegai appeared through a shattered
plank, but Hans stabbed along the line of it with the spear he held,
that which I had snatched from the flank of the horse, and it was
dropped with a scream. Black hands were thrust through the hole, and
the Hottentot hacked and cut at them with the spear. But others came,
more than he could pierce, and the whole door-frame began to be dragged
outwards.

“Now, Marie, be ready,” I gasped, lifting the pistol.

“Oh, Christ receive me!” she answered faintly. “It won’t hurt much,
will it, Allan?”

“You will never feel anything,” I whispered; as with the cold sweat
pouring from me I placed the muzzle within an inch of her forehead and
began to press the trigger. My God! yes, I actually began to press the
trigger softly and steadily, for I wished to make no mistake.

It was at this very moment, above the dreadful turmoil of the roaring
flames, the yells of the savages and the shrieks and groans of wounded
and dying men, that I heard the sweetest sound which ever fell upon my
ears—the sound of shots being fired, many shots, and quite close by.

“Great Heaven!” I screamed; “the Boers are here to save us. Marie, I
will hold the door while I can. If I fall, scramble through the
window—you can do it from the chest beneath—drop to the ground, and run
towards the firing. There’s a chance for you yet, a good chance.”

“And you, you,” she moaned. “I would rather die with you.”

“Do what I bid you,” I answered savagely, and bounded forward towards
the rocking door.

It was falling outward, it fell, and on the top of it appeared two
great savages waving broad spears. I lifted the pistol, and the bullet
that had been meant for Marie’s brain scattered that of the first of
them, and the bullet which had been meant for my heart pierced that of
the second. They both went down dead, there in the doorway.

I snatched up one of their spears and glanced behind me. Marie was
climbing on to the chest; I could just see her through the thickening
smoke. Another Quabie rushed on. Hans and I received him on the points
of our assegais, but so fierce was his charge that they went through
him as though he were nothing, and being but light, both of us were
thrown backwards to the ground. I scrambled to my feet again,
defenceless now, for the spear was broken in the Kaffir, and awaited
the end. Looking back once more I saw that Marie had either failed to
get through the window or abandoned the attempt. At any rate she was
standing near the chest supporting herself by her right hand. In my
despair I seized the blade end of the broken assegai and dragged it
from the body of the Kaffir, thinking that it would serve to kill her,
then turned to do the deed.

But even as I turned I heard a voice that I knew well shout: “Do you
live, Marie?” and in the doorway appeared no savage, but Henri Marais.

Slowly I backed before him, for I could not speak, and the last
dreadful effort of my will seemed to thrust me towards Marie. I reached
her and threw my hand that still held the gory blade round her neck.
Then as darkness came over me I heard her cry:

“Don’t shoot, father. It is Allan, Allan who has saved my life!”

After that I remember no more. Nor did she for a while, for we both
fell to the ground senseless.

When my senses returned to me I found myself lying on the floor of the
wagon-house in the back yard. Glancing from my half-opened eyes, for I
was still speechless, I saw Marie, white as a sheet, her hair all
falling about her dishevelled dress. She was seated on one of those
boxes that we put on the front of wagons to drive from, _voorkissies_
they are called, and as her eyes were watching me I knew that she
lived. By her stood a tall and dark young man whom I had never seen
before. He was holding her hand and looking at her anxiously, and even
then I felt angry with him. Also I saw other things; for instance, my
old father leaning down and looking at _me_ anxiously, and outside in
the yard, for there were no doors to the wagon-house, a number of men
with guns in their hands, some of whom I knew and others who were
strangers. In the shadow, too, against the wall, stood my blood mare
with her head hanging down and trembling all over. Not far from her the
roan lay upon the ground, its flank quite red.

I tried to rise and could not, then feeling pain in my left thigh,
looked and saw that it was red also. As a matter of fact an assegai had
gone half through it and hit upon the bone. Although I never felt it at
the time, this wound was dealt to me by that great Quabie whom Hans and
I had received upon our spears, doubtless as he fell. Hans, by the way,
was there also, an awful and yet a ludicrous spectacle, for the Quabie
had fallen right on the top of him and lain so with results that may be
imagined. There he sat upon the ground, looking upwards, gasping with
his fish-like mouth. Each gasp, I remember, fashioned itself into the
word _Allemachte!_ that is “Almighty,” a favourite Dutch expression.

Marie was the first to perceive that I had come to life again. Shaking
herself free from the clasp of the young man, she staggered towards me
and fell upon her knees at my side, muttering words that I could not
catch, for they choked in her throat. Then Hans took in the situation,
and wriggling his unpleasant self to my other side, lifted my hand and
kissed it. Next my father spoke, saying:

“Praise be to God, he lives! Allan, my son, I am proud of you; you have
done your duty as an Englishman should.”

“Had to save my own skin if I could, thank you, father,” I muttered.

“Why as an Englishman more than any other sort of man, Mynheer
prédicant?” asked the tall stranger, speaking in Dutch, although he
evidently understood our language.

“The point is one that I will not argue now, sir,” answered my father,
drawing himself up. “But if what I hear is true, there was a Frenchman
in that house who did not do his duty; and if you belong to the same
nation, I apologise to you.”

“Thank you, sir; as it happens, I do, half. The rest of me is
Portuguese, not English, thank God.”

“God is thanked for many things that must surprise Him,” replied my
father in a suave voice.

At that moment this rather disagreeable conversation, which even then
both angered and amused me faintly, came to an end, for the Heer Marais
entered the place.

As might have been expected in so excitable a man, he was in a terrible
state of agitation. Thankfulness at the escape of his only, beloved
child, rage with the Kaffirs who had tried to kill her, and extreme
distress at the loss of most of his property—all these conflicting
emotions boiled together in his breast like antagonistic elements in a
crucible.

The resulting fumes were parti-coloured and overpowering. He rushed up
to me, blessed and thanked me (for he had learnt something of the story
of the defence), called me a young hero and so forth, hoping that God
would reward me. Here I may remark that _he_ never did, poor man. Then
he began to rave at Leblanc, who had brought all this dreadful disaster
upon his house, saying that it was a judgment on himself for having
sheltered an atheist and a drunkard for so many years, just because he
was French and a man of intellect. Someone, my father as a matter of
fact, who with all his prejudices possessed a great sense of justice,
reminded him that the poor Frenchman had expiated, or perchance was now
expiating any crimes that he might have committed.

This turned the stream of his invective on to the Quabie Kaffirs, who
had burned part of his house and stolen nearly all his stock, making
him from a rich man into a poor one in a single hour. He shouted for
vengeance on the “black devils,” and called on all there to help him to
recover his beasts and kill the thieves. Most of those present—they
were about thirty in all, not counting the Kaffir and Hottentot
after-riders—answered that they were willing to attack the Quabies.
Being residents in the district, they felt, and, indeed, said, that his
case to-day might and probably would be their case to-morrow. Therefore
they were prepared to ride at once.

Then it was that my father intervened.

“Heeren,” he said, “it seems to me that before you seek vengeance,
which, as the Book tells us, is the Lord’s, it would be well,
especially for the Heer Marais, to return thanks for what has been
saved to him. I mean his daughter, who might now very easily have been
dead or worse.”

He added that goods came or went according to the chances of fortune,
but a beloved human life, once lost, could not be restored. This
precious life had been preserved to him, he would not say by man—here
he glanced at me—but by the Ruler of the world acting through man.
Perhaps those present did not quite understand what he (my father) had
learned from Hans the Hottentot, that I, his son, had been about to
blow out the brains of Marie Marais and my own when the sound of the
shots of those who had been gathered through the warning which I left
before I rode from the Mission Station, had stayed my hand. He called
upon the said Hans and Marie herself to tell them the story, since I
was too weak to do so.

Thus adjured, the little Hottentot, smothered as he was in blood, stood
up. In the simple, dramatic style characteristic of his race, he
narrated all that had happened since he met the woman on the veld but
little over twelve hours before, till the arrival of the rescue party.
Never have I seen a tale followed with deeper interest, and when at
last Hans pointed to me lying on the ground and said, “There is he who
did these things which it might be thought no man could do—he, but a
boy,” even from those phlegmatic Dutchmen there came a general cheer.
But, lifting myself upon my hands, I called out:

“Whatever I did, this poor Hottentot did also, and had it not been for
him I could not have done anything—for him and the two good horses.”

Then they cheered again, and Marie, rising, said:

“Yes, father; to these two I owe my life.”

After this, my father offered his prayer of thanksgiving in very bad
Dutch—for, having begun to learn it late in life, he never could really
master that language—and the stalwart Boers, kneeling round him, said
“Amen.” As the reader may imagine, the scene, with all its details,
which I will not repeat, was both remarkable and impressive.

What followed this prayer I do not very well remember, for I became
faint from exhaustion and the loss of blood. I believe, however, that
the fire having been extinguished, they removed the dead and wounded
from the unburnt portion of the house and carried me into the little
room where Marie and I had gone through that dreadful scene when I went
within an ace of killing her. After this the Boers and Marais’s
Kaffirs, or rather slaves, whom he had collected from where they lived
away from the house, to the number of thirty or forty, started to
follow the defeated Quabie, leaving about ten of their number as a
guard. Here I may mention that of the seven or eight men who slept in
the outbuildings and had fought with us, two were killed in the fight
and two wounded. The remainder, one way or another, managed to escape
unhurt, so that in all this fearful struggle, in which we inflicted so
terrible a punishment upon the Kaffirs, we lost only three slain,
including the Frenchman, Leblanc.

As to the events of the next three days I know only what I have been
told, for practically during all that time I was off my head from loss
of blood, complicated with fever brought on by the fearful excitement
and exertion I had undergone. All I can recall is a vision of Marie
bending over me and making me take food of some sort—milk or soup, I
suppose—for it seems I would touch it from no other hand. Also I had
visions of the tall shape of my white-haired father, who, like most
missionaries, understood something of surgery and medicine, attending
to the bandages on my thigh. Afterwards he told me that the spear had
actually cut the walls of the big artery, but, by good fortune, without
going through them. Another fortieth of an inch and I should have bled
to death in ten minutes!

On this third day my mind was brought back from its wanderings by the
sound of a great noise about the house, above which I heard the voice
of Marais storming and shouting, and that of my father trying to calm
him. Presently Marie entered the room, drawing-to behind her a Kaffir
karoos, which served as a curtain, for the door, it will be remembered,
had been torn out. Seeing that I was awake and reasonable, she flew to
my side with a little cry of joy, and, kneeling down, kissed me on the
forehead.

“You have been very ill, Allan, but I know you will recover now. While
we are alone, which,” she added slowly and with meaning, “I dare say we
shall not be much in future, I want to thank you from my heart for all
that you did to save me. Had it not been for you, oh! had it not been
for you”—and she glanced at the blood stains on the earthen floor, put
her hands before her eyes and shuddered.

“Nonsense, Marie,” I answered, taking her hand feebly enough, for I was
very weak. “Anyone else would have done as much, even if they did not
love you as I do. Let us thank God that it was not in vain. But what is
all that noise? Have the Quabies come back?”

She shook her head.

“No; the Boers have come back from hunting them.”

“And did they catch them and recover the cattle?”

“Not so. They only found some wounded men, whom they shot, and the body
of Monsieur Leblanc with his head cut off, taken away with other bits
of him for medicine, they say to make the warriors brave. Quabie has
burnt his kraal and fled with all his people to join the other Kaffirs
in the Big Mountains. Not a cow or a sheep did they find, except a few
that had fallen exhausted, and those had their throats cut. My father
wanted to follow them and attack the Red Kaffirs in the mountains, but
the others would not go. They said there are thousands of them, and
that it would be a mad war, from which not one of them would return
alive. He is wild with grief and rage, for, Allan dear, we are almost
ruined, especially as the British Government are freeing the slaves and
only going to give us a very small price, not a third of their value.
But, hark! he is calling me, and you must not talk much or excite
yourself, lest you should be ill again. Now you have to sleep and eat
and get strong. Afterwards, dear, you may talk”; and, bending down once
more, she blessed and kissed me, then rose and glided away.




CHAPTER IV.
HERNANDO PEREIRA


Several more days passed before I was allowed out of that little
war-stained room of which I grew to hate the very sight. I entreated my
father to take me into the air, but he would not, saying that he feared
lest any movement should cause the bleeding to begin again or even the
cut artery to burst. Moreover, the wound was not healing very well, the
spear that caused it having been dirty or perhaps used to skin dead
animals, which caused some dread of gangrene, that in those days
generally meant death. As it chanced, although I was treated only with
cold water, for antiseptics were then unknown, my young and healthy
blood triumphed and no gangrene appeared.

What made those days even duller was that during them I saw very little
of Marie, who now only entered the place in the company of her father.
Once I managed to ask her why she did not come oftener and alone. Her
face grew troubled as she whispered back, “Because it is not allowed,
Allan,” and then without another word left the place.

Why, I wondered to myself, was it not allowed, and an answer sprang up
in my mind. Doubtless it was because of that tall young man who had
argued with my father in the wagon-house. Marie had never spoken to me
of him, but from the Hottentot Hans and my father I managed to collect
a good deal of information concerning him and his business.

It appeared that he was the only child of Henri Marais’s sister, who
married a Portuguese from Delagoa Bay of the name of Pereira, who had
come to the Cape Colony to trade many years before and settled there.
Both he and his wife were dead, and their son, Hernando, Marie’s
cousin, had inherited all their very considerable wealth.

Indeed, now I remembered having heard this Hernando, or Hernan, as the
Boers called him for short, spoken of in past years by the Heer Marais
as the heir to great riches, since his father had made a large fortune
by trading in wine and spirits under some Government monopoly which he
held. Often he had been invited to visit Maraisfontein, but his
parents, who doted on him and lived in one of the settled districts not
far from Cape Town, would never allow him to travel so far from them
into these wild regions.

Since their death, however, things had changed. It appeared that on the
decease of old Pereira the Governor of the Colony had withdrawn the
wine and spirit monopoly, which he said was a job and a scandal, an act
that made Hernando Pereira very angry, although he needed no more
money, and had caused him to throw himself heart and soul into the
schemes of the disaffected Boers. Indeed, he was now engaged as one of
the organisers of the Great Trek which was in contemplation. In fact,
it had already begun, into the partially explored land beyond the
borders of the Colony, where the Dutch farmers proposed to set up
dominions of their own.

That was the story of Hernando Pereira, who was to be—nay, who had
already become—my rival for the hand of the sweet and beautiful Marie
Marais.

One night when my father and I were alone in the little room where he
slept with me, and he had finished reading his evening portion of
Scripture aloud, I plucked up my courage to tell him that I loved Marie
and wished to marry her, and that we had plighted our troth during the
attack of the Kaffirs on the stead.

“Love and war indeed!” he said, looking at me gravely, but showing no
sign of surprise, for it appeared that he was already acquainted with
our secret. This was not wonderful, for he informed me afterwards that
during my delirium I had done nothing except rave of Marie in the most
endearing terms. Also Marie herself, when I was at my worst, had burst
into tears before him and told him straight out that she loved me.

“Love and war indeed!” he repeated, adding kindly, “My poor boy, I fear
that you have fallen into great trouble.”

“Why, father?” I asked. “Is it wrong that we should love each other?”

“Not wrong, but, in the circumstances, quite natural—I should have
foreseen that it was sure to happen. No, not wrong, but most
unfortunate. To begin with, I do not wish to see you marry a foreigner
and become mixed up with these disloyal Boers. I hoped that one day, a
good many years hence, for you are only a boy, Allan, you would find an
English wife, and I still hope it.”

“Never!” I ejaculated.

“Never is a long word, Allan, and I dare say that what you are so sure
is impossible will happen after all,” words that made me angry enough
at the time, though in after years I often thought of them.

“But,” he went on, “putting my own wishes, perhaps prejudices, aside, I
think your suit hopeless. Although Henri Marais likes you well enough
and is grateful to you just now because you have saved the daughter
whom he loves, you must remember that he hates us English bitterly. I
believe that he would almost as soon see his girl marry a half-caste as
an Englishman, and especially a poor Englishman, as you are, and unless
you can make money, must remain. I have little to leave you, Allan.”

“I might make money, father, out of ivory, for instance. You know I am
a good shot.”

“Allan, I do not think you will ever make much money, it is not in your
blood; or, if you do, you will not keep it. We are an old race, and I
know our record, up to the time of Henry VIII. at any rate. Not one of
us was ever commercially successful. Let us suppose, however, that you
should prove yourself the exception to the rule, it can’t be done at
once, can it? Fortunes don’t grow in a night, like mushrooms.”

“No, I suppose not, father. Still, one might have some luck.”

“Possibly. But meanwhile you have to fight against a man who has the
luck, or rather the money in his pocket.”

“What do you mean?” I asked, sitting up.

“I mean Hernando Pereira, Allan, Marais’s nephew, who they say is one
of the richest men in the Colony. I know that he wishes to marry
Marie.”

“How do you know it, father?”

“Because Marais told me so this afternoon, probably with a purpose. He
was struck with her beauty when he first saw her after your escape,
which he had not done since she was a child, and as he stopped to guard
the house while the rest went after the Quabies—well, you can guess.
Such things go quickly with these Southern men.”

I hid my face in the pillow, biting my lips to keep back the groan that
was ready to burst from them, for I felt the hopelessness of the
situation. How could I compete with this rich and fortunate man, who
naturally would be favoured of my betrothed’s father? Then on the
blackness of my despair rose a star of hope. I could not, but perchance
Marie might. She was very strong-natured and very faithful. She was not
to be bought, and I doubted whether she could be frightened.

“Father,” I said, “I may never marry Marie, but I don’t think that
Hernando Pereira ever will either.”

“Why not, my boy?”

“Because she loves me, father, and she is not one to change. I believe
that she would rather die.”

“Then she must be a very unusual sort of woman. Still, it may be so;
the future will tell to those who live to see it. I can only pray and
trust that whatever happens will be for the best for both of you. She
is a sweet girl and I like her well, although she may be Boer—or
French. And now, Allan, we have talked enough, and you had better go to
sleep. You must not excite yourself, you know, or it may set up new
inflammation in the wound.”

“Go to sleep. Must not excite yourself.” I kept muttering those words
for hours, serving them up in my mind with a spice of bitter thought.
At last torpor, or weakness, overcame me, and I fell into a kind of net
of bad dreams which, thank Heaven! I have now forgotten. Yet when
certain events happened subsequently I always thought, and indeed still
think, that these or something like them, had been a part of those evil
dreams.

On the morning following this conversation I was at length allowed to
be carried to the stoep, where they laid me down, wrapped in a very
dirty blanket, upon a rimpi-strung bench or primitive sofa. When I had
satisfied my first delight at seeing the sun and breathing the fresh
air, I began to study my surroundings. In front of the house, or what
remained of it, so arranged that the last of them at either end we made
fast to the extremities of the stoep, was arranged an arc of wagons,
placed as they are in a laager and protected underneath by earth thrown
up in a mound and by boughs of the mimosa thorn. Evidently these
wagons, in which the guard of Boers and armed natives who still
remained on the place slept at night, were set thus as a defence
against a possible attack by the Quabies or other Kaffirs.

During the daytime, however, the centre wagon was drawn a little on one
side to leave a kind of gate. Through this opening I saw that a long
wall, also semicircular, had been built outside of them, enclosing a
space large enough to contain at night all the cattle and horses that
were left to the Heer Marais, together with those of his friends, who
evidently did not wish to see their oxen vanish into the depths of the
mountains. In the middle of this extemporised kraal was a long, low
mound, which, as I learned afterwards, contained the dead who fell in
the attack on the house. The two slaves who had been killed in the
defence were buried in the little garden that Marie had made, and the
headless body of Leblanc in a small walled place to the right of the
stead, where lay some of its former owners and one or two relatives of
the Heer Marais, including his wife.

Whilst I was noting these things Marie appeared at the end of the
veranda, having come round the burnt part of the house, followed by
Hernan Pereira. Catching sight of me, she ran to the side of my couch
with outstretched arms as though she intended to embrace me. Then
seeming to remember, stopped suddenly at my side, coloured to her hair,
and said in an embarrassed voice:

“Oh, Heer Allan”—she had never called me Heer in her life before—“I am
so glad to find you out! How have you been getting on?”

“Pretty well, I thank you,” I answered, biting my lips, “as you would
have learnt, Marie, had you come to see me.”

Next moment I was sorry for the words, for I saw her eyes fill with
tears and her breast shake with something like a sob. However, it was
Pereira and not Marie who answered, for at the moment I believe she
could not speak.

“My good boy,” he said in a pompous, patronising way and in English,
which he knew perfectly, “I think that my cousin has had plenty to do
caring for all these people during the last few days without running to
look at the cut in your leg. However, I am glad to hear from your
worthy father that it is almost well and that you will soon be able to
play games again, like others of your age.”

Now it was my turn to be unable to speak and to feel my eyes fill with
tears, tears of rage, for remember that I was still very feeble. But
Marie spoke for me.

“Yes, Cousin Hernan,” she said in a cold voice, “thank God the Heer
Allan Quatermain will soon be able to play games again, such bloody
games as the defence of Maraisfontein with eight men against all the
Quabie horde. Then Heaven help those who stand in front of his rifle,”
and she glanced at the mound that covered the dead Kaffirs, many of
whom, as a matter of fact, I had killed.

“Oh! no offence, no offence, Marie,” said Pereira in his smooth, rich
voice. “I did not want to laugh at your young friend, who doubtless is
as brave as they say all Englishmen are, and who fought well when he
was lucky enough to have the chance of protecting you, my dear cousin.
But after all, you know, he is not the only one who can hold a gun
straight, as you seem to think, which I shall be happy to prove to him
in a friendly fashion when he is stronger.”

Here he stepped forward a pace and looked down at me, then added with a
laugh, “Allemachte! I fear that won’t be just at present. Why, the lad
looks as though one might blow him away like a feather.”

Still I said nothing, only glanced up at this tall and splendid man
standing above me in his fine clothes, for he was richly dressed as the
fashion of the time went, with his high colouring, broad shoulders, and
face full of health and vigour. Mentally I compared him with myself, as
I was after my fever and loss of blood, a poor, white-faced rat of a
lad, with stubbly brown hair on my head and only a little down on my
chin, with arms like sticks, and a dirty blanket for raiment. How could
I compare with him in any way? What chance had I against this opulent
bully who hated me and all my race, and in whose hands, even if I were
well, I should be nothing but a child?

And yet, and yet as I lay there humiliated and a mock, an answer came
into my mind, and I felt that whatever might be the case with my
outward form; in spirit, in courage, in determination and in ability,
in all, in short, that really makes a man, I was more than Pereira’s
equal. Yes, and that by the help of these qualities, poor as I was and
frail as I seemed to be, I would beat him at the last and keep for
myself what I had won, the prize of Marie’s love.

Such were the thoughts which passed through me, and I think that
something of the tenor of them communicated itself to Marie, who often
could read my heart before my lips spoke. At any rate, her demeanour
changed. She drew herself up. Her fine nostrils expanded and a proud
look came into her dark eyes, as she nodded her head and murmured in a
voice so low that I think I alone caught her words:

“Yes, yes, have no fear.”

Pereira was speaking again (he had turned aside to strike the steel of
his tinder-box, and was now blowing the spark to a glow before lighting
his big pipe).

“By the way, Heer Allan,” he said, “that is a very good mare of yours.
She seems to have done the distance between the Mission Station and
Maraisfontein in wonderful time, as, for the matter of that, the roan
did too. I have taken a fancy to her, after a gallop on her back
yesterday just to give her some exercise, and although I don’t know
that she is quite up to my weight, I’ll buy her.”

“The mare is not for sale, Heer Pereira,” I said, speaking for the
first time, “and I do not remember giving anyone leave to exercise
her.”

“No, your father did, or was it that ugly little beast of a Hottentot?
I forget which. As for her not being for sale—why, in this world
everything is for sale, at a price. I’ll give you—let me see—oh, what
does the money matter when one has plenty? I’ll give you a hundred
English pounds for that mare; and don’t you think me a fool. I tell you
I mean to get it back, and more, at the great races down in the south.
Now what do you say?”

“I say that the mare is not for sale, Heer Pereira.” Then a thought
struck me, or an inspiration, and, as has always been my fashion, I
acted on it at once. “But,” I added slowly, “if you like, when I am a
bit stronger I’ll shoot you a match for her, you staking your hundred
pounds and I staking the mare.”

Pereira burst out laughing.

“Here, friends,” he called to some of the Boers who were strolling up
to the house for their morning coffee. “This little Englishman wants to
shoot a match with me, staking that fine mare of his against a hundred
pounds British; against me, Hernando Pereira, who have won every prize
at shooting that ever I entered for. No, no, friend Allan, I am not a
thief, I will not rob you of your mare.”

Now among those Boers chanced to be the celebrated Heer Pieter Retief,
a very fine man of high character, then in the prime of life, and of
Huguenot descent like Heer Marais. He had been appointed by the
Government one of the frontier commandants, but owing to some quarrel
with the Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Andries Stockenstrom, had recently
resigned that office, and at this date was engaged in organizing the
trek from the Colony. I now saw Retief for the first time, and ah! then
little did I think how and where I should see him for the last. But all
that is a matter of history, of which I shall have to tell later.

Now, while Pereira was mocking and bragging of his prowess, Pieter
Retief looked at me, and our eyes met.

“Allemachte!” he exclaimed, “is that the young man who, with half a
dozen miserable Hottentots and slaves, held this stead for five hours
against all the Quabie tribe and kept them out?”

Somebody said that it was, remarking that I had been about to shoot
Marie Marais and myself when help came.

“Then, Heer Allan Quatermain,” said Retief, “give me your hand,” and he
took my poor wasted fingers in his big palm, adding, “Your father must
be proud of you to-day, as I should be if I had such a son. God in
Heaven! where will you stop if you can go so far while you are yet a
boy? Friends, since I came here yesterday I have got the whole story
for myself from the Kaffirs and from this _mooi meisje_” (pretty young
lady), and he nodded towards Marie. “Also I have gone over the ground
and the house, and have seen where each man fell—it is easy by the
blood marks—most of them shot by yonder Englishman, except one of the
last three, whom he killed with a spear. Well, I tell you that never in
all my experience have I known a better arranged or a more finely
carried out defence against huge odds. Perhaps the best part of it,
too, was the way in which this young lion acted on the information he
received and the splendid ride he made from the Mission Station. Again
I say that his father should be proud of him.”

“Well, if it comes to that, I am, mynheer,” said my father, who just
then joined us after his morning walk, “although I beg you to say no
more lest the lad should grow vain.”

“Bah!” replied Retief, “fellows of his stamp are not vain; it is your
big talkers who are vain,” and he glanced out of the corner of his
shrewd eye at Pereira, “your turkey cocks with all their tails spread.
I think this little chap must be such another as that great sailor of
yours—what do you call him, Nelson?—who beat the French into frothed
eggs and died to live for ever. He was small, too, they say, and weak
in the stomach.”

I must confess I do not think that praise ever sounded sweeter in my
ears than did these words of the Commandant Retief, uttered as they
were just when I felt crushed to the dirt. Moreover, as I saw by
Marie’s and, I may add, by my father’s face, there were other ears to
which they were not ungrateful. The Boers also, brave and honest men
enough, evidently appreciated them, for they said:

“_Ja! ja! das ist recht_” (That is right).

Only Pereira turned his broad back and busied himself with relighting
his pipe, which had gone out.

Then Retief began again.

“What is it you were calling us to listen to, Mynheer Pereira? That
this Heer Allan Quatermain had offered to shoot you a match? Well, why
not? If he can hit Kaffirs running at him with spears, as he has done,
he may be able to hit other things also. You say that you won’t rob him
of his money—no, it was his beautiful horse—because you have taken so
many prizes shooting at targets. But did _you_ ever hit a Kaffir
running at _you_ with an assegai, mynheer, you who live down there
where everything is safe? If so, I never heard of it.”

Pereira answered that he did not understand me to propose a shooting
match at Kaffirs charging with assegais, but at something else—he knew
not what.

“Quite so,” said Retief. “Well, Mynheer Allan, what is it that you do
propose?”

“That we should stand in the great kloof between the two _vleis_
yonder—the Heer Marais knows the place—when the wild geese flight over
an hour before sunset, and that he who brings down six of them in the
fewest shots shall win the match.”

“If our guns are loaded with loopers that will not be difficult,” said
Pereira.

“With loopers you would seldom kill a bird, mynheer,” I replied, “for
they come over from seventy to a hundred yards up. No, I mean with
rifles.”

“Allemachte!” broke in a Boer; “you will want plenty of ammunition to
hit a goose at that height with a bullet.”

“That is my offer,” I said, “to which I add this, that when twenty
shots have been fired by each man, he who has killed the most birds
wins, even if he has not brought down the full six. Does the Heer
Pereira accept? If so, I will venture to match myself against him,
although he has won so many prizes.”

The Heer Pereira seemed extremely doubtful; so doubtful, indeed, that
the Boers began to laugh at him. In the end he grew rather angry, and
said that he was willing to shoot me at bucks or swallows, or
fireflies, or anything else I liked.

“Then let it be at geese,” I answered, “since it is likely to be
sometime before I am strong enough to ride after buck or other wild
things.”’

So the terms of the match were formally written down by Marie, as my
father, although he took a keen sporting interest in the result, would
have nothing to do with what he called a “wager for money,” and, except
myself, there was no one else present with sufficient scholarship to
pen a long document. Then we both signed them, Hernan Pereira not very
willingly, I thought; and if my recovery was sufficiently rapid, the
date was fixed for that day week. In case of any disagreement, the Heer
Retief, who was staying at Maraisfontein, or in its neighbourhood, for
a while, was appointed referee and stakeholder. It was also arranged
that neither of us should visit the appointed place, or shoot at the
geese before the match. Still we were at liberty to practise as much as
we liked at anything else in the interval and to make use of any kind
of rifle that suited us best.

By the time that these arrangements were finished, feeling quite tired
with all the emotions of the morning, I was carried back to my room.
Here my midday meal, cooked by Marie, was brought to me. As I finished
eating it, for the fresh air had given me an appetite, my father came
in, accompanied by the Heer Marais, and began to talk to me. Presently
the latter asked me kindly enough if I thought I should be sufficiently
strong to trek back to the station that afternoon in an ox-cart with
springs to it and lying at full length upon a hide-strung _cartel_ or
mattress.

I answered, “Certainly,” as I should have done had I been at the point
of death, for I saw that he wished to be rid of me.

“The fact is, Allan,” he said awkwardly, “I am not inhospitable as you
may think, especially towards one to whom I owe so much. But you and my
nephew, Hernan, do not seem to get on very well together, and, as you
may guess, having just been almost beggared, I desire no unpleasantness
with the only rich member of my family.”

I replied I was sure I did not wish to be the cause of any. It seemed
to me, however, that the Heer Pereira wished to make a mock of me and
to bring it home to me what a poor creature I was compared to himself—I
a mere sick boy who was worth nothing.

“I know,” said Marais uneasily, “my nephew has been too fortunate in
life, and is somewhat overbearing in his manner. He does not remember
that the battle is not always to the strong or the race to the swift,
he who is young and rich and handsome, a spoiled child from the first.
I am sorry, but what I cannot help I must put up with. If I cannot have
my mealies cooked, I must eat them green. Also, Allan, have you never
heard that jealousy sometimes makes people rude and unjust?” and he
looked at me meaningly.

I made no answer, for when one does not quite know what to say it is
often best to remain silent, and he went on:

“I am vexed to hear of this foolish shooting match which has been
entered into without my knowledge or consent. If he wins he will only
laugh at you the more, and if you win he will be angry.”

“It was not my fault, mynheer,” I answered. “He wanted to force me to
sell the mare, which he had been riding without my leave, and kept
bragging about his marksmanship. So at last I grew cross and challenged
him.”

“No wonder, Allan; I do not blame you. Still, you are silly, for it
will not matter to him if he loses his money; but that beautiful mare
is your ewe-lamb, and I should be sorry to see you parted from a beast
which has done us so good a turn. Well, there it is; perhaps
circumstances may yet put an end to this trial; I hope so.”

“I hope they won’t,” I answered stubbornly.

“I dare say you do, being sore as a galled horse just now. But listen,
Allan, and you, too, prédicant Quatermain; there are other and more
important reasons than this petty squabble why I should be glad if you
could go away for a while. I must take counsel with my countrymen about
certain secret matters which have to do with our welfare and future,
and, of course they would not like it if all the while there were two
Englishmen on the place, whom they might think were spies.”

“Say no more, Heer Marais,” broke in my father hotly; “still less
should we like to be where we are not wanted or are looked upon with
suspicion for the crime of being English. By God’s blessing, my son has
been able to do some service to you and yours, but now that is all
finished and forgotten. Let the cart you are so kind as to lend us be
inspanned. We will go at once.”

Then Henri Marais, who was a gentleman at bottom, although, even in
those early days, violent and foolish when excited or under the
influence of his race prejudices, began to apologise quite humbly,
assuring my father that he forgot nothing and meant no offence. So they
patched the matter up, and an hour later we started.

All the Boers came to see us off, giving me many kind words and saying
how much they looked forward to meeting me again on the following
Thursday. Pereira, who was among them, was also very genial, begging me
to be sure and get well, since he did not wish to beat one who was
still crippled, even at a game of goose shooting. I answered that I
would do my best; as for my part, I did not like being beaten at any
game which I had set my heart on winning, whether it were little or
big. Then I turned my head, for I was lying on my back all this time,
to bid good-bye to Marie, who had slipped out of the house into the
yard where the cart was.

“Good-bye, Allan,” she said, giving me her hand and a look from her
eyes that I trusted was not seen. Then, under pretence of arranging the
kaross which was over me, she bent down and whispered swiftly:

“Win that match if you love me. I shall pray God that you may every
night, for it will be an omen.”

I think the whisper was heard, though not the words, for I saw Pereira
bite his lip and make a movement as though to interrupt her. But Pieter
Retief thrust his big form in front of him rather rudely, and said with
one of his hearty laughs:

“Allemachte! friend, let the _missje_ wish a good journey to the young
fellow who saved her life.”

Next moment Hans, the Hottentot, screamed at the oxen in the usual
fashion, and we rolled away through the gate.

But oh! if I had liked the Heer Retief before, now I loved him.




CHAPTER V.
THE SHOOTING MATCH


My journey back to the Mission Station was a strange contrast to that
which I had made thence a few days before. Then, the darkness, the
swift mare beneath me rushing through it like a bird, the awful terror
in my heart lest I should be too late, as with wild eyes I watched the
paling stars and the first gathering grey of dawn. Now, the creaking of
the ox-cart, the familiar veld, the bright glow of the peaceful
sunlight, and in my heart a great thankfulness, and yet a new terror
lest the pure and holy love which I had won should be stolen away from
me by force or fraud.

Well, as the one matter had been in the hand of God, so was the other,
and with that knowledge I must be content. The first trial had ended in
death and victory. How would the second end? I wondered, and those
words seemed to jumble themselves up in my mind and shape a sentence
that it did not conceive. It was: “In the victory that is death,”
which, when I came to think of it, of course, meant nothing. How
victory could be death I did not understand—at any rate, at that time,
I who was but a lad of small experience.

As we trekked along comfortably enough, for the road was good and the
cart, being on springs, gave my leg no pain, I asked my father what he
thought that the Heer Marais had meant when he told us that the Boers
had business at Maraisfontein, during which our presence as Englishmen
would not be agreeable to them.

“Meant, Allan? He meant that these traitorous Dutchmen are plotting
against their sovereign, and are afraid lest we should report their
treason. Either they intend to rebel because of that most righteous
act, the freeing of the slaves, and because we will not kill out all
the Kaffirs with whom they chance to quarrel, or to trek from the
Colony. For my part I think it will be the latter, for, as you have
heard, some parties have already gone; and, unless I am mistaken, many
more mean to follow, Marais and Retief and that plotter, Pereira, among
them. Let them go; I say, the sooner the better, for I have no doubt
that the English flag will follow them in due course.”

“I hope that they won’t,” I answered with a nervous laugh; “at any
rate, until I have won back my mare.” (I had left her in Retief’s care
as stakeholder, until the match should be shot off.)

For the rest of that two and a half hours’ trek my father, looking very
dignified and patriotic, declaimed to me loudly about the bad behaviour
of the Boers, who hated and traduced missionaries, loathed and
abominated British rule and permanent officials, loved slavery and
killed Kaffirs whenever they got the chance. I listened to him
politely, for it was not wise to cross my parent when he was in that
humour. Also, having mixed a great deal with the Dutch, I knew that
there was another side to the question, namely, that the missionaries
sometimes traduced them (as, in fact, they did), and that British rule,
or rather, party government, played strange tricks with the interests
of distant dependencies. That permanent officials and im-permanent ones
too—such as governors full of a little brief authority—often
misrepresented and oppressed them. That Kaffirs, encouraged by the
variegated policy of these party governments and their servants,
frequently stole their stock; and if they found a chance, murdered them
with their women and children, as they had tried to do at
Maraisfontein; though there, it is true, they had some provocation.
That British virtue had liberated the slaves without paying their
owners a fair price for them, and so forth.

But, to tell the truth, it was not of these matters of high policy,
which were far enough away from a humble youth like myself, that I was
thinking. What appealed to me and made my heart sick was the reflection
that if Henri Marais and his friends trekked, Marie Marais must
perforce trek with them; and that whereas I, an Englishman, could not
be of that adventurous company, Hernando Pereira both could and would.

On the day following our arrival home, what between the fresh air,
plenty of good food, for which I found I had an appetite, and liberal
doses of Pontac—a generous Cape wine that is a kind of cross between
port and Burgundy—I found myself so much better that I was able to hop
about the place upon a pair of crutches which Hans improvised for me
out of Kaffir sticks. Next morning, my improvement continuing at a
rapid rate, I turned my attention seriously to the shooting match, for
which I had but five days to prepare.

Now it chanced that some months before a young Englishman of good
family—he was named the Honourable Vavasseur Smyth—who had accompanied
an official relative to the Cape Colony, came our way in search of
sport, of which I was able to show him a good deal of a humble kind. He
had brought with him, amongst other weapons, what in those days was
considered a very beautiful hair-triggered small-bore rifle fitted with
a nipple for percussion caps, then quite a new invention. It was by a
maker of the name of J. Purdey, of London, and had cost quite a large
sum because of the perfection of its workmanship. When the Honourable
V. Smyth—of whom I have never heard since—took his leave of us on his
departure for England, being a generous-hearted young fellow, as a
souvenir of himself, he kindly presented me with this rifle,[1] which I
still have.

 [1] This single-barrelled percussion-cap rifle described by Allan
 Quatermain, which figures so prominently in the history of this epoch
 of his life, has been sent to me by Mr. Curtis, and is before me as I
 write. It was made in the year 1835 by J. Purdey, of 314½, Oxford
 Street, London, and is a beautiful piece of workmanship of its kind.
 Without the ramrod, which is now missing, it weighs only 5 lbs. 3¾ oz.
 The barrel is octagonal, and the rifled bore, designed to take a
 spherical bullet, is ½ in. in diameter. The hammer can be set to
 safety on the half-cock by means of a catch behind it.

Another peculiarity of the weapon, one that I have never seen before,
is that by pressing on the back of the trigger the ordinary light pull
of the piece is so reduced that the merest touch suffices to fire it,
thus rendering it hair- triggered in the fullest sense of the word.

It has two flap-sights marked for 150 and 200 yards, in addition to the
fixed sight designed for firing at 100 yards.

On the lock are engraved a stag and a doe, the first lying down and the
second standing.

Of its sort and period, it is an extraordinarily well-made and handy
gun, finished with horn at the end of what is now called the tongue,
and with the stock cut away so as to leave a raised cushion against
which the cheek of the shooter rests.

What charge it took I do not know, but I should imagine from 2½ to 3
drachms of powder. It is easy to understand that in the hands of Allan
Quatermain this weapon, obsolete as it is to-day, was capable of great
things within the limits of its range, and that the faith he put in it
at the trial of skill at the Groote Kloof, and afterwards in the
fearful ordeal of the shooting of the vultures on the wing, upon the
Mount of Slaughter, when the lives of many hung upon his marksmanship,
was well justified. This, indeed, is shown by the results in both
cases.

In writing of this rifle, Messrs. Purdey informed me that copper
percussion caps were experimented with by Colonel Forsyth in 1820, and
that their firm sold them in 1824, at a cost of £1 15s. per 1,000,
although their use did not become general until some years later.—THE
EDITOR.


That was about six months earlier than the time of which I write, and
during those months I had often used this rifle for the shooting of
game, such as blesbuck and also of bustards. I found it to be a weapon
of the most extraordinary accuracy up to a range of about two hundred
yards, though when I rode off in that desperate hurry for Maraisfontein
I did not take it with me because it was a single barrel and too small
in the bore to load with loopers at a pinch. Still, in challenging
Pereira, it was this gun and no other that I determined to use; indeed,
had I not owned it I do not think that I should have ventured on the
match.

As it happened, Mr. Smyth had left me with the rifle a large supply of
specially cast bullets and of the new percussion caps, to say nothing
of some very fine imported powder. Therefore, having ammunition in
plenty, I set to work to practise. Seating myself upon a chair in a
deep kloof near the station, across which rock pigeons and turtle doves
were wont to fly in numbers at a considerable height, I began to fire
at them as they flashed over me.

Now, in my age, I may say without fear of being set down a boaster,
that I have one gift, that of marksmanship, which, I suppose, I owe to
some curious combination of judgment, quickness of eye, and steadiness
of hand. I can declare honestly that in my best days I never knew a man
who could beat me in shooting at a living object; I say nothing of
target work, of which I have little experience. Oddly enough, also, I
believe that at this art, although then I lacked the practice which
since has come to me in such plenty, I was as good as a youth as I have
ever been in later days, and, of course, far better than I am now. This
I soon proved upon the present occasion, for seated there in that
kloof, after a few trials, I found that I could bring down quite a
number of even the swift, straight-flying rock pigeons as they sped
over me, and this, be it remembered, not with shot, but with a single
bullet, a feat that many would hold to be incredible.

So the days passed, and I practised, every evening finding me a little
better at this terribly difficult sport. For always I learned more as
to the exact capacities of my rifle and the allowance that must be made
according to the speed of the bird, its distance, and the complications
of the wind and of the light. During those days, also, I recovered so
rapidly that at the end of them I was almost in my normal condition,
and could walk well with the aid of a single stick.

At length the eventful Thursday came, and about midday—for I lay in bed
late that morning and did not shoot—I drove, or, rather, was driven, in
a Cape cart with two horses to the place known as Groote Kloof or Great
Gully. Over this gorge the wild geese flighted from their _pans_ or
feeding grounds on the high lands above, to other _pans_ that lay some
miles below, and thence, I suppose, straight out to the sea coast,
whence they returned at dawn.

On arriving at the mouth of Groote Kloof about four o’clock in the
afternoon, my father and I were astonished to see a great number of
Boers assembled there, and among them a certain sprinkling of their
younger womankind, who had come on horseback or in carts.

“Good gracious!” I said to my father; “if I had known there was to be
such a fuss as this about a shooting match, I don’t think I could have
faced it.”

“Hum,” he answered; “I think there is more in the wind than your match.
Unless I am much mistaken, it has been made the excuse of a public
meeting in a secluded spot, so as to throw the Authorities off the
scent.”

As a matter of fact, my father was quite right. Before we arrived there
that day the majority of those Boers, after full and long discussion,
had arranged to shake the dust of the Colony off their feet, and find a
home in new lands to the north.

Presently we were among them, and I noticed that, one and all, their
faces were anxious and preoccupied. Pieter Retief caught sight of me
being helped out of the cart by my father and Hans, whom I had brought
to load, and for a moment looked puzzled. Evidently his thoughts were
far away. Then he remembered and exclaimed in his jolly voice:

“Why! here is our little Englishman come to shoot off his match like a
man of his word. Friend Marais, stop talking about your losses”—this in
a warning voice—“and give him good day.”

So Marais came, and with him Marie, who blushed and smiled, but to my
mind looked more of a grown woman than ever before; one who had left
girlhood behind her and found herself face to face with real life and
all its troubles. Following her close, very close, as I was quick to
notice, was Hernan Pereira. He was even more finely dressed than usual
and carried in his hand a beautiful new, single-barrelled rifle, also
fitted to take percussion caps, but, as I thought, of a very large bore
for the purpose of goose shooting.

“So you have got well again,” he said in a genial voice that yet did
not ring true. Indeed, it suggested to me that he wished I had done
nothing of the sort. “Well, Mynheer Allan, here you find me quite ready
to shoot your head off.” (He didn’t mean that, though I dare say he
was.) “I tell you that the mare is as good as mine, for I have been
practising, haven’t I, Marie? as the _aasvogels_” (that is, vultures)
“round the stead know to their cost.”

“Yes, Cousin Hernan,” said Marie, “you have been practising, but so,
perhaps, has Allan.”

By this time all the company of Boers had collected round us, and began
to evince a great interest in the pending contest, as was natural among
people who rarely had a gun out of their hands, and thought that fine
shooting was the divinest of the arts. However, they were not allowed
to stay long, as the Kaffirs said that the geese would begin their
afternoon flight within about half an hour. So the spectators were all
requested to arrange themselves under the sheer cliff of the kloof,
where they could not be seen by the birds coming over them from behind,
and there to keep silence. Then Pereira and I—I attended by my loader,
but he alone, as he said a man at his elbow would bother him—and with
us Retief, the referee, took our stations about a hundred and fifty
yards from this face of cliff. Here we screened ourselves as well as we
could from the keen sight of the birds behind some tall bushes which
grew at this spot.

I seated myself on a camp-stool, which I had brought with me, for my
leg was still too weak to allow me to stand long, and waited. Presently
Pereira said through Retief that he had a favour to ask, namely, that I
would allow him to take the first six shots, as the strain of waiting
made him nervous. I answered, “Certainly,” although I knew well that
the object of the request was that he believed that the outpost
geese—“spy-geese” we called them—which would be the first to arrive,
would probably come over low down and slow, whereas those that
followed, scenting danger, might fly high and fast. This, in fact,
proved to be the case, for there is no bird more clever than the
misnamed goose.

When we had waited about a quarter of an hour Hans said:

“Hist! Goose comes.”

As he spoke, though as yet I could not see the bird, I heard its cry of
“_Honk, honk_” and the swish of its strong wings.

Then it appeared, an old spur-winged gander, probably the king of the
flock, flying so low that it only cleared the cliff edge by about
twenty feet, and passed over not more than thirty yards up, an easy
shot. Pereira fired, and down it came rather slowly, falling a hundred
yards or so behind him, while Retief said:

“One for our side.”

Pereira loaded again, and just as he had capped his rifle three more
geese, also flying low, came over, preceded by a number of ducks,
passing straight above us, as they must do owing to the shape of the
gap between the land waves of the veld above through which they
flighted. Pereira shot, and to my surprise, the second, not the first,
bird fell, also a good way behind him.

“Did you shoot at that goose, or the other, nephew?” asked Retief.

“At that one for sure,” he answered with a laugh.

“He lies,” muttered the Hottentot; “he shot at the first and killed the
second.”

“Be silent,” I answered. “Who would lie about such a thing?”

Again Pereira loaded. By the time that he was ready more geese were
approaching, this time in a triangle of seven birds, their leader being
at the point of the triangle, which was flying higher than those that
had gone before. He fired, and down came not one bird, but two, namely,
the captain and the goose to the right of and a little behind it.

“Ah! uncle,” exclaimed Pereira, “did you see those birds cross each
other as I pulled? That was a lucky one for me, but I won’t count the
second if the Heer Allan objects.”

“No, I did not, nephew,” answered Retief, “but doubtless they must have
done so, or the same bullet could not have pierced both.”

Both Hans and I only looked at each other and laughed. Still we said
nothing.

From the spectators under the cliff there came a murmur of
congratulation not unmixed with astonishment. Again Pereira loaded,
aimed, and loosed at a rather high goose—it may have been about seventy
yards in the air. He struck it right enough, for the feathers flew from
its breast; but to my astonishment the bird, after swooping down as
though it were going to fall, recovered itself and flew away straight
out of sight.

“Tough birds, these geese!” exclaimed Pereira. “They can carry as much
lead as a sea-cow.”

“Very tough indeed,” answered Retief doubtfully. “Never before did I
see a bird fly away with an ounce ball through its middle.”

“Oh! he will drop dead somewhere,” replied Pereira as he rammed his
powder down.

Within four minutes more Pereira had fired his two remaining shots,
selecting, as he was entitled to do, low and easy young geese that came
over him slowly. He killed them both, although the last of them, after
falling, waddled along the ground into a tuft of high grass.

Now murmurs of stifled applause broke from the audience, to which
Pereira bowed in acknowledgment.

“You will have to shoot very well, Mynheer Allan,” said Retief to me,
“if you want to beat that. Even if I rule out one of the two birds that
fell to a single shot, as I think I shall, Hernan has killed five out
of six, which can scarcely be bettered.”

“Yes,” I answered; “but, mynheer, be so good as to have those geese
collected and put upon one side. I don’t want them mixed up with mine,
if I am lucky enough to bring any down.”

He nodded, and some Kaffirs were sent to bring in the geese. Several of
these, I noted, were still flapping and had to have their necks
twisted, but at the time I did not go to look at them. While this was
being done I called to Retief, and begged him to examine the powder and
bullets I was about to use.

“What’s the good?” he asked, looking at me curiously. “Powder is
powder, and a bullet is a bullet.”

“None, I dare say. Still, oblige me by looking at them, my uncle.”

Then at my bidding Hans took six bullets and placed them in his hand,
begging him to return them to us as they were wanted.

“They must be a great deal smaller than Hernan’s,” said Retief, “who,
being stronger, uses a heavier gun.”

“Yes,” I answered briefly, as Hans put the charge of powder into the
rifle, and drove home the wad. Then, taking a bullet from Retief’s
hand, he rammed that down on to the top of it, capped the gun, and
handed it to me.

By now the geese were coming thick, for the flight was at its full.
Only, either because some of those that had already passed had sighted
the Kaffirs collecting the fallen birds and risen—an example which the
others noted from afar and followed—or because in an unknown way
warning of their danger had been conveyed to them, they were flying
higher and faster than the first arrivals.

“You will have the worst of it, Allan,” said Retief. “It should have
been shot and shot about.”

“Perhaps,” I answered, “but that can’t be helped now.”

Then I rose from my stool, the rifle in my hand. I had not long to
wait, for presently over came a wedge of geese nearly a hundred yards
up. I aimed at the first fellow, holding about eight yards ahead of him
to allow for his pace, and pressed. Next second I heard the clap of the
bullet, but alas! it had only struck the outstretched beak, of which a
small portion fell to the ground. The bird itself, after wavering a
second, resumed its place as leader of the squad and passed away
apparently unharmed.

“Baas, baas,” whispered Hans as he seized the rifle and began to
re-load, “you were too far in front. These big water-birds do not
travel as fast as the rock pigeons.”

I nodded, wishing to save my breath. Then, quivering with excitement,
for if I missed the next shot the match appeared to be lost, presently
I took the rifle from his hand.

Scarcely had I done so when a single goose came over quite as high as
the others and travelling “as though the black devil had kicked it,” as
Retief said. This time I allowed the same space to compensate for the
object’s increased speed and pressed.

Down it came like a stone, falling but a little way behind me with its
head knocked off.

“Baas, baas,” whispered Hans, “still too far in front. Why aim at the
eye when you have the whole body?”

Again I nodded, and at the same time heaved a sigh of relief. At least
the match was still alive. Soon a large flight came over, mixed up with
mallard and widgeon. I took the right-hand angle bird, so that it could
not be supposed I had “browned the lot,” as here in England they say of
one who fires at a covey and not at a particular partridge. Down he
came, shot straight through the breast. Then I knew that I had got my
nerve, and felt no more fear.

To cut a long story short, although two of them were extremely
difficult and high, one being, I should say, quite a hundred and twenty
yards above me, and the other by no means easy, I killed the next three
birds one after the other, and I verily believe could have killed a
dozen more without a miss, for now I was shooting as I had never shot
before.

“Say, nephew Allan,” asked Retief curiously in the pause between the
fifth and sixth shots, “why do your geese fall so differently to
Hernan’s?”

“Ask him! don’t talk to me,” I answered, and next instant brought down
number five, the finest shot of the lot.

A sound of wonder and applause came from all the audience, and I saw
Marie wave a white handkerchief.

“That’s the end,” said the referee.

“One minute before you stir,” I answered. “I want to shoot at something
else that is not in the match, just to see if I can kill two birds with
one bullet like the Heer Pereira.”

He granted my request with a nod, holding up his hand to prevent the
audience from moving, and bidding Pereira, who tried to interrupt, to
be silent.

Now, while the match was in progress I had noticed two falcons about
the size of the British peregrine wheeling round and round high over
the kloof, in which doubtless they bred, apparently quite undisturbed
by the shooting. Or, perhaps, they had their eyes upon some of the
fallen geese. I took the rifle and waited for a long while, till at
last my opportunity came. I saw that the larger hen falcon was about to
cross directly over the circle of its mate, there being perhaps a
distance of ten yards between them. I aimed; I judged—for a second my
mind was a kind of calculating machine—the different arcs and speeds of
the birds must be allowed for, and the lowest was ninety yards away.
Then, with something like a prayer upon my lips, I pressed while every
eye stared upwards.

Down came the lower falcon; a pause of half a second, and down came the
higher one also, falling dead upon its dead mate!

Now, even from those Boers, who did not love to see an Englishman
excel, there broke a shout of acclamation. Never had they beheld such a
shot as this; nor in truth had I.

“Mynheer Retief,” I said, “I gave you notice that I intended to try to
kill both of them, did I not?”

“You did. Allemachte! you did! But tell me, Allan Quatermain, are your
eye and hand quite human?”

“You must ask my father,” I answered with a shrug as I sat myself down
upon my stool and mopped my brow.

The Boers came up with a rush, Marie flying ahead of them like a
swallow, and their stout womenfolk waddling behind, and formed a circle
round us, all talking at once. I did not listen to their conversation,
till I heard Pereira, who was engaged in some eye-play with Marie, say
in a loud voice:

“Yes, it was pretty, very pretty, but all the same, Uncle Retief, I
claim the match, as I shot six geese against five.”

“Hans,” I said, “bring my geese,” and they were brought, each with a
neat hole through it, and laid down near those that Pereira had shot.
“Now,” I said to Retief, “examine the wounds in these birds, and then
that on the second bird which the Heer Pereira killed when he brought
down two at once. I think it will be found that his bullet must have
splintered.”

Retief went and studied all the birds, taking them up one by one. Then
he threw down the last with a curse and cried in a great voice:

“Mynheer Pereira, why do you bring shame on us before these two
Englishmen? I say that you have been using _loopers_, or else bullets
that were sawn in quarters and glued or tied with thread. Look, look!”
and he pointed to the wounds, of which in one case there were as many
as three on a single bird.

“Why not?” answered Pereira coolly. “The bargain was that we were to
use bullets, but it was never said that they should not be cut.
Doubtless the Heer Allan’s were treated in the same way.”

“No,” I answered, “when I said that I would shoot with a bullet I meant
a whole bullet, not one that had been sawn in pieces and fixed together
again, so that after it left the muzzle it might spread out like shot.
But I do not wish to talk about the matter. It is in the hands of the
Heer Pieter Retief, who will give judgment as it pleases him.”

Now, much excited argument ensued among the Boers, in the midst of
which Marie managed to whisper to me unheard:

“Oh! I am glad, Allan, for whatever they may decide, you won, and the
omen is good.”

“I don’t see what geese have to do with omens, sweetheart,” I
answered—“that is, since the time of the ancient Romans. Anyhow, I
should say that the omens are bad, for there is going to be a row
presently.”

Just then Retief put up his hand, calling out:

“Silence! I have decided. The writing of the match did not say that the
bullets were not to be cut, and therefore Hernan Pereira’s birds must
count. But that writing does say that any bird accidentally killed
should not count, and therefore one goose must be subtracted from
Pereira’s total, which leaves the two shooters equal. So either the
match is dead or, since the geese have ceased to come, it must be shot
off another day.”

“Oh! if there is any question,” said Pereira, who felt that public
opinion was much against him, “let the Englishman take the money. I
dare say that he needs it, as the sons of missionaries are not rich.”

“There is no question,” I said, “since, rich or poor, not for a
thousand pounds would I shoot again against one who plays such tricks.
Keep your money, Mynheer Pereira, and I will keep my mare. The umpire
has said that the match is dead, so everything is finished.”

“Not quite,” interrupted Retief, “for I have a word to say. Friend
Allan, you have played fair, and I believe that there is no one who can
shoot like you in Africa.”

“That is so,” said the audience of Boers.

“Mynheer Pereira,” went on Retief, “although you, too, are a fine shot,
as is well known, I believe that had you played fair also you would
have been beaten, but as it is you have saved your hundred pounds.
Mynheer Pereira,” he added in a great voice, “you are a cheat, who have
brought disgrace upon us Boers, and for my part I never want to shake
your hand again.”

Now, at these outspoken words, for when his indignation was aroused
Retief was no measurer of language, Pereira’s high-coloured face went
white as a sheet.

“_Mein Gott_, mynheer,” he said, “I am minded to make you answer for
such talk,” and his hand went to the knife at his girdle.

“What!” shouted Retief, “do you want another shooting match? Well, if
so I am ready with whole bullets or with split ones. None shall say
that Pieter Retief was afraid of any man, and, least of all, of one who
is not ashamed to try to steal a prize as a hyena steals a bone from a
lion. Come on, Hernan Pereira, come on!”

Now, I am sure I cannot say what would have happened, although I am
quite certain that Pereira had no stomach for a duel with the
redoubtable Retief, a man whose courage was as proverbial throughout
the land as was his perfect uprightness of character. At any rate,
seeing that things looked very black, Henri Marais, who had been
listening to this altercation with evident annoyance, stepped forward
and said:

“Mynheer Retief and nephew Hernan, you are both my guests, and I will
not permit quarrelling over this foolishness, especially as I am sure
that Hernan never intended to cheat, but only to do what he thought was
allowed. Why should he, who is one of the finest shots in the Colony,
though it may be that young Allan Quatermain here is even better? Will
you not say so, too, friend Retief, especially just now when it is
necessary that we should all be as brothers?” he added pleadingly.

“No,” thundered Retief, “I will not tell a lie to please you or
anyone.”

Then, seeing that the commandant was utterly uncompromising, Marais
went up to his nephew and whispered to him for a while. What he said I
do not know. The result of it was, however, that after favouring both
Retief and myself with an angry scowl, Pereira turned and walked to
where his horse stood, mounted it, and rode off, followed by two
Hottentot after-riders.

That was the last I saw of Hernan Pereira for a long while to come, and
heartily do I wish that it had been the last I ever saw of him. But
this was not to be.




CHAPTER VI.
THE PARTING


The Boers, who ostensibly had come to the kloof to see the shooting
match, although, in fact, for a very different purpose, now began to
disperse. Some of them rode straight away, while some went to wagons
which they had outspanned at a distance, and trekked off to their
separate homes. I am glad to say that before they left quite a number
of the best of them came up and congratulated me both on the defence of
Maraisfontein and on my shooting. Also not a few expressed their views
concerning Pereira in very straightforward language.

Now, the arrangement was that my father and I were to sleep that night
at Marais’s stead, returning home on the following morning. But my
father, who had been a silent but not unobservant witness of all this
scene, coming to the conclusion that after what had happened we should
scarcely be welcome there, and that the company of Pereira was to be
avoided just now, went up to Marais and bade him farewell, saying that
we would send for my mare.

“Not so, not so,” he answered, “you are my guests to-night. Also, fear
not, Hernan will be away. He has gone a journey upon some business.”

As my father hesitated, Marais added: “Friend, I pray you to come, for
I have some important words to say to you, which cannot be said here.”

Then my father gave way, to my delight and relief. For if he had not,
what chance would there have been of my getting some still more
important words with Marie? So having collected the geese and the two
falcons, which I proposed to skin for Marie, I was helped into the
cart, and we drove off, reaching Maraisfontein just as night set in.

That evening, after we had eaten, Heer Marais asked my father and
myself to speak with him in the sitting-room. By an afterthought also,
or so it seemed to me, he told his daughter, who had been clearing away
the dishes and with whom as yet I had found no opportunity to talk, to
come in with us and close the door behind her.

When all were seated and we men had lit our pipes, though apprehension
of what was to follow quite took away my taste for smoking, Marais
spoke in English, which he knew to a certain extent. This was for the
benefit of my father, who made it a point of honour not to understand
Dutch, although he would answer Marais in that language when _he_
pretended not to understand English. To me he spoke in Dutch, and
occasionally in French to Marie. It was a most curious and polyglot
conversation.

“Young Allan,” he said, “and you, daughter Marie, I have heard stories
concerning you that, although I never gave you leave to _opsit_” (that
is, to sit up alone at night with candles, according to the Boer
fashion between those who are courting), “you have been making love to
each other.”

“That is true, mynheer,” I said. “I only waited an opportunity to tell
you that we plighted our troth during the attack of the Quabies on this
house.”

“Allemachte! Allan, a strange time to choose,” answered Marais, pulling
at his beard; “the troth that is plighted in blood is apt to end in
blood.”

“A vain superstition to which I cannot consent,” interrupted my father.

“Perhaps so,” I answered. “I know not; God alone knows. I only know
that we plighted our troth when we thought ourselves about to die, and
that we shall keep that troth till death ends it.”

“Yes, my father,” added Marie, leaning forward across the scored
yellow-wood table, her chin resting on her hand and her dark, buck-like
eyes looking him in the face. “Yes, my father, that is so, as I have
told you already.”

“And I tell you, Marie, what I have told you already, and you too,
Allan, that this thing may not be,” answered Marais, hitting the table
with his fist. “I have nothing to say against you, Allan; indeed, I
honour you, and you have done me a mighty service, but it may not be.”

“Why not, mynheer?” I asked.

“For three reasons, Allan, each of which is final. You are English, and
I do not wish my daughter to marry an Englishman; that is the first.
You are poor, which is no discredit to you, and since I am now ruined
my daughter cannot marry a poor man; that is the second. You live here,
and my daughter and I are leaving this country, therefore you cannot
marry her; that is the third,” and he paused.

“Is there not a fourth,” I asked, “which is the real reason? Namely,
that you wish your daughter to marry someone else.”

“Yes, Allan; since you force me to it, there is a fourth. I have
affianced my daughter to her cousin, Hernando Pereira, a man of
substance and full age; no lad, but one who knows his own mind and can
support a wife.”

“I understand,” I answered calmly, although within my heart a very hell
was raging. “But tell me, mynheer, has Marie affianced herself—or
perhaps she will answer with her own lips?”

“Yes, Allan,” replied Marie in her quiet fashion, “I have affianced
myself—to you and no other man.”

“You hear, mynheer,” I said to Marais.

Then he broke out in his usual excitable manner. He stormed, he argued,
he rated us both. He said that he would never allow it; that first he
would see his daughter in her grave. That I had abused his confidence
and violated his hospitality; that he would shoot me if I came near his
girl. That she was a minor, and according to the law he could dispose
of her in marriage. That she must accompany him whither he was going;
that certainly I should not do so, and much more of the same sort.

When at last he had tired himself out and smashed his favourite pipe
upon the table, Marie spoke, saying:

“My father, you know that I love you dearly, for since my mother’s
death we have been everything to each other, have we not?”

“Surely, Marie, you are my life, and more than my life.”

“Very well, my father. That being so, I acknowledge your authority over
me, whatever the law may say. I acknowledge that you have the right to
forbid me to marry Allan, and if you do forbid me—while I am under age,
at any rate—I shall not marry him because of my duty to you. But”—here
she rose and looked him full in the eyes, and oh! how stately she
seemed at that moment in her simple strength and youthful grace!—“there
is one thing, my father, that I do not acknowledge—your right to force
me to marry any other man. As a woman with power over herself, I deny
that right; and much as it pains me, my father, to refuse you anything,
I say that first I will die. To Allan here I have given myself for good
or for evil, and if I may not marry Allan, I will go to the grave
unwed. If my words hurt you, I pray you to pardon me, but at the same
time to remember that they are my words, which cannot be altered.”

Marais looked at his daughter, and his daughter looked at Marais. At
first I thought that he was about to curse her; but if this were so,
something in her eyes seemed to change his mind, for all he said was:

“Intractable, like the rest of your race! Well, Fate may lead those who
cannot be driven, and this matter I leave in the hands of Fate. While
you are under age—that is, for two years or more—you may not marry
without my consent, and have just promised not to do so. Presently we
trek from this country into far-off lands. Who knows what may happen
there?”

“Yes,” said my father in a solemn voice, speaking for the first time,
“who knows except God, Who governs all things, and will settle these
matters according to His will, Henri Marais? Listen,” he went on after
a pause, for Marais made no answer, but sat himself down and stared
gloomily at the table. “You do not wish my son to marry your daughter
for various reasons, of which one is that you think him poor and a
richer suitor has offered himself after a reverse of fortune has made
_you_ poor. Another and a greater, the true reason, is his English
blood, which you hate so much that, although by God’s mercy he saved
her life, you do not desire that he should share her life. Is it not
true?”

“Yes, it is true, Mynheer Quatermain. You English are bullies and
cheats,” he answered excitedly.

“And so you would give your daughter to one who has shown himself
humble and upright, to that good hater of the English and plotter
against his King, Hernando Pereira, whom you love because he alone is
left of your ancient race.”

Remembering the incident of the afternoon, this sarcasm reduced Marais
to silence.

“Well,” went on my father, “although I am fond of Marie, and know her
to be a sweet and noble-hearted girl, neither do I wish that she should
marry my son. I would see him wed to some English woman, and not
dragged into the net of the Boers and their plottings. Still, it is
plain that these two love each other with heart and soul, as doubtless
it has been decreed that they should love. This being so, I tell you
that to separate them and force another marriage upon one of them is a
crime before God, of which, I am sure, He will take note and pay it
back to you. Strange things may happen in those lands whither you go,
Henri Marais. Will you not, then, be content to leave your child in
safe keeping?”

“Never!” shouted Marais. “She shall accompany me to a new home, which
is not under the shadow of your accursed British flag.”

“Then I have no more to say. On your head be it here and hereafter,”
replied my father solemnly.

Now unable to control myself any longer I broke in:

“But I have, mynheer. To separate Marie and myself is a sin, and one
that will break her heart. As for my poverty, I have something, more
perhaps than you think, and in this rich country wealth can be earned
by those who work, as I would do for her sake. The man to whom you
would give her showed his true nature this day, for he who can play so
low a trick to win a wager, will play worse tricks to win greater
things. Moreover, the scheme must fail since Marie will not marry him.”

“I say she shall,” replied Marais; “and that whether she does or not,
she shall accompany me and not stay here to be the wife of an English
boy.”

“Accompany you I will, father, and share your fortunes to the last. But
marry Hernando Pereira I will not,” said Marie quietly.

“Perhaps, mynheer,” I added, “days may come when once again you will be
glad of the help of an ‘English boy.’”

The words were spoken at random, a kind of ejaculation from the heart,
caused by the sting of Marais’s cruelty and insults, like the cry of a
beast beneath a blow. Little did I know how true they would prove, but
at times it is thus that truth is mysteriously drawn from some well of
secret knowledge hidden in our souls.

“When I want your help I will ask for it,” raved Marais, who, knowing
himself to be in the wrong, strove to cover up that wrong with
violence.

“Asked or unasked, if I live it shall be given in the future as in the
past, Mynheer Marais. God pardon you for the woe you are bringing on
Marie and on me.”

Now Marie began to weep a little, and, unable to bear that sight, I
covered my eyes with my hand. Marais, who, when he was not under the
influence of his prejudices or passion, had a kind heart, was moved
also, but tried to hide his feelings in roughness. He swore at Marie,
and told her to go to bed, and she obeyed, still weeping. Then my
father rose and said:

“Henri Marais, we cannot leave here to-night because the horses are
kraaled, and it would be difficult to find them in this darkness, so we
must ask your hospitality till dawn.”

“_I_ do not ask it,” I exclaimed. “I go to sleep in the cart,” and I
limped from the room and the house, leaving the two men together.

What passed afterwards between them I do not quite know. I gathered
that my father, who, when roused, also had a temper and was mentally
and intellectually the stronger man, told Marais his opinion of his
wickedness and folly in language that he was not likely to forget. I
believe he even drove him to confess that his acts seemed cruel,
excusing them, however, by announcing that he had sworn before God that
his daughter should never marry an Englishman. Also he said that he had
promised her solemnly to Pereira, his own nephew, whom he loved, and
could not break his word.

“No,” answered my father, “because, being mad with the madness that
runs before destruction, you prefer to break Marie’s heart and perhaps
become guilty of her blood.”

Then he left him.

The darkness was intense. Through it I groped my way to the cart, which
stood where it had been outspanned on the veld at a little distance
from the house, wishing heartily, so miserable was I, that the Kaffirs
might choose that black night for another attack and make an end of me.

When I reached it and lit the lantern which we always carried, I was
astonished to find that, in a rough fashion, it had been made ready to
sleep in. The seats had been cleared out, the hind curtain fastened,
and so forth. Also the pole was propped up with an ox-yoke so as to
make the vehicle level to lie in. While I was wondering vaguely who
could have done this, Hans climbed on to the step, carrying two
karosses which he had borrowed or stolen, and asked if I was
comfortable.

“Oh, yes!” I answered; “but why were you going to sleep in the cart?”

“Baas,” he replied, “I was not; I prepared it for you. How did I know
that you were coming? Oh, very simply. I sat on the stoep and listened
to all the talk in the _sitkammer_. The window has never been mended,
baas, since the Quabies broke it. God in Heaven! what a talk that was.
I never knew that white people could have so much to say about a simple
matter. You want to marry the Baas Marais’s daughter; the baas wants
her to marry another man who can pay more cattle. Well, among us it
would soon have been settled, for the father would have taken a stick
and beaten you out of the hut with the thick end. Then he would have
beaten the girl with the thin end until she promised to take the other
man, and all would have been settled nicely. But you Whites, you talk
and talk, and nothing is settled. You still mean to marry the daughter,
and the daughter still means not to marry the man of many cows.
Moreover, the father has really gained nothing except a sick heart and
much bad luck to come.”

“Why much bad luck to come, Hans?” I asked idly, for his naïve summing
up of the case interested me in a vague way.

“Oh! Baas Allan, for two reasons. First, your reverend father, who made
me true Christian, told him so, and a prédicant so good as he, is one
down whom the curse of God runs from Heaven like lightning runs down a
tree. Well, the Heer Marais was sitting under that tree, and we all
know what happens to him who is under a tree when the lightning strikes
it. That my first Christian reason. My second black-man reason, about
which there can be no mistake, for it has always been true since there
was a black man, is that the girl is yours by blood. You saved her life
with your blood,” and he pointed to my leg, “and therefore bought her
for ever, for blood is more than cattle. Therefore, too, he who would
divide her from you brings blood on her and on the other man who tries
to steal her, blood, blood! and on himself I know not what.” And he
waved his yellow arms, staring up at me with his little black eyes in a
way that was most uncanny.

“Nonsense!” I said. “Why do you talk such bad words?”

“Because they are true words, Baas Allan. Oh, you laugh at the poor
Totty; but I had it from my father, and he from his father from
generation to generation, amen, and you will see. You will see, as I
have seen before now, and as the Heer Marais will see, who, if the
great God had not made him mad—for mad he is, baas, as we know, if you
Whites don’t—might have lived in his home till he was old, and have had
a good son-in-law to bury him in his blanket.”

Now I seemed to have had enough of this eerie conversation. Of course
it is easy to laugh at natives and their superstitions, but, after a
long life of experience, I am bound to admit that they are not always
devoid of truth. The native has some kind of sixth sense which the
civilised man has lost, or so it seems to me.

“Talking of blankets,” I said in order to change the subject, “from
whom did you get these karosses?”

“From whom? Why, from the Missie, of course, baas. When I heard that
you were to sleep in the cart I went to her and borrowed them to cover
you. Also, I had forgotten, she gave me a writing for you,” and he felt
about, first in his dirty shirt, then under his arm, and finally in his
fuzzy hair, from which last hiding place he produced a little bit of
paper folded into a pellet. I undid it and read these words, written
with a pencil and in French:—

“I shall be in the peach orchard half an hour before sunrise. Be there
if you would bid me farewell.—M.”


“Is there any answer, baas?” asked Hans when I had thrust the note into
my pocket. “If so I can take it without being found out.” Then an
inspiration seemed to strike him, and he added: “Why do you not take it
yourself? The Missie’s window is easy to open, also I am sure she would
be pleased to see you.”

“Be silent,” I said. “I am going to sleep. Wake me an hour before the
cock-crow—and, stay—see that the horses have got out of the kraal so
that you cannot find them too easily in case the Reverend wishes to
start very early. But do not let them wander far, for here we are no
welcome guests.”

“Yes, baas. By the way, baas, the Heer Pereira, who tried to cheat you
over those geese, is sleeping in an empty house not more than two miles
away. He drinks coffee when he wakes up in the morning, and his
servant, who makes it, is my good friend. Now would you like me to put
a little something into it? Not to kill him, for that is against the
law in the Book, but just to make him quite mad, for the Book says
nothing about that. If so, I have a very good medicine, one that you
white people do not know, which improves the taste of the coffee, and
it might save much trouble. You see, if he came dancing about the place
without any clothes on, like a common Kaffir, the Heer Marais, although
_he_ is really mad also, might not wish for him as a son-in-law.”

“Oh! go to the devil if you are not there already,” I replied, and
turned over as though to sleep.

There was no need for me to have instructed that faithful creature, the
astute but immoral Hans, to call me early, as the lady did her mother
in the poem, for I do not think that I closed an eye that night. I
spare my reflections, for they can easily be imagined in the case of an
earnest-natured lad who was about to be bereft of his first love.

Long before the dawn I stood in the peach orchard, that orchard where
we had first met, and waited. At length Marie came stealing between the
tree trunks like a grey ghost, for she was wrapped in some
light-coloured garment. Oh! once more we were alone together. Alone in
the utter solitude and silence which precede the African dawn, when all
creatures that love the night have withdrawn to their lairs and hiding
places, and those that love the day still sleep their soundest.

She saw me and stood still, then opened her arms and clasped me to her
breast, uttering no word. A while later she spoke almost in a whisper,
saying:

“Allan, I must not stay long, for I think that if my father found us
together, he would shoot you in his madness.”

Now as always it was of me she thought, not of herself.

“And you, my sweet?” I asked.

“Oh!” she answered, “that matters nothing. Except for the sin of it I
wish he would shoot me, for then I should have done with all this pain.
I told you, Allan, when the Kaffirs were on us yonder, that it might be
better to die; and see, my heart spoke truly.”

“Is there no hope?” I gasped. “Will he really separate us and take you
away into the wilderness?”

“Certainly, nothing can turn him. Yet, Allan, there is this hope. In
two years, if I live, I shall be of full age, and can marry whom I
will; and this I swear, that I will marry none but you, no, not even if
you were to die to-morrow.”

“I bless you for those words,” I said.

“Why?” she asked simply. “What others could I speak? Would you have me
do outrage to my own heart and go through life faithless and ashamed?”

“And I, I swear also,” I broke in.

“Nay, swear nothing. While I live I know that you will love me, and if
I should be taken, it is my wish that you should marry some other good
woman, since it is not well or right that man should live alone. With
us maids it is different. Listen, Allan, for the cocks are beginning to
crow, and soon there will be light. You must bide here with your
father. If possible, I will write to you from time to time, telling you
where we are and how we fare. But if I do not write, know that it is
because I cannot, or because I can find no messenger, or because the
letters have miscarried, for we go into wild countries, amongst
savages.”

“Whither do you go?” I asked.

“I believe up towards the great harbour called Delagoa Bay, where the
Portuguese rule. My cousin Hernan, who accompanies us”—and she shivered
a little in my arms—“is half Portuguese. He tells the Boers that he has
relations there who have written him many fine promises, saying they
will give us good country to dwell in where we cannot be followed by
the English, whom he and my father hate so much.”

“I have heard that is all fever veld, and that the country between is
full of fierce Kaffirs,” I said with a groan.

“Perhaps. I do not know, and I do not care. At least, that is the
notion in my father’s head, though, of course, circumstances may change
it. I will try to let you know, Allan, or if I do not, perhaps you will
be able to find out for yourself. Then, then, if we both live and you
still care for me, who will always care for you, when I am of age, you
will join us and, say and do what they may, I will marry no other man.
And if I die, as may well happen, oh! then my spirit shall watch over
you and wait for you till you join me beneath the wings of God. Look,
it grows light. I must go. Farewell, my love, my first and only love,
till in life or death we meet again, as meet we shall.”

Once more we clung together and kissed, muttering broken words, and
then she tore herself from my embrace and was gone. But oh! as I heard
her feet steal through the dew-laden grass, I felt as though my heart
were being rent from my breast. I have suffered much in life, but I do
not think that ever I underwent a bitterer anguish than in this hour of
my parting from Marie. For when all is said and done, what joy is there
like the joy of pure, first love, and what bitterness like the
bitterness of its loss?

Half an hour later the flowering trees of Maraisfontein were behind us,
while in front rolled the fire-swept veld, black as life had become for
me.




CHAPTER VII.
ALLAN’S CALL


A fortnight later Marais, Pereira and their companions, a little band
in all of about twenty men, thirty women and children, and say fifty
half-breeds and Hottentot after-riders, trekked from their homes into
the wilderness. I rode to the crest of a table-topped hill and watched
the long line of wagons, one of them containing Marie, crawl away
northward across the veld a mile or more beneath.

Sorely was I tempted to gallop after them and seek a last interview
with her and her father. But my pride forbade me. Henri Marais had
given out that if I came near his daughter he would have me beaten back
with _sjambocks_ or hide whips. Perhaps he had gained some inkling of
our last farewell in the peach orchard. I do not know. But I do know
that if anyone had lifted a _sjambock_ on me I should have answered
with a bullet. Then there would have been blood between us, which is
worse to cross than whole rivers of wrath and jealousy. So I just
watched the wagons until they vanished, and galloped home down the
rock-strewn slope, wishing that the horse would stumble and break my
neck.

When I reached the station, however, I was glad that it had not done
so, as I found my father sitting on the stoep reading a letter that had
been brought by a mounted Hottentot.

It was from Henri Marais, and ran thus:—

“‘REVEREND HEER AND FRIEND QUATERMAIN,—I send this to bid you farewell,
for although you are English and we have quarrelled at times, I honour
you in my heart. Friend, now that we are starting, your warning words
lie on me like lead, I know not why. But what is done cannot be undone,
and I trust that all will come right. If not, it is because the Good
Lord wills it otherwise.’”

Here my father looked up and said: “When men suffer from their own
passion and folly, they always lay the blame on the back of
Providence.”

Then he went on, spelling out the letter:

“‘I fear your boy Allan, who is a brave lad, as I have reason to know,
and honest, must think that I have treated him harshly and without
gratitude. But I have only done what I must do. True, Marie, who, like
her mother, is very strong and stubborn in mind, swears that she will
marry no one else; but soon Nature will make her forget all that,
especially as such a fine husband waits for her hand. So bid Allan
forget all about her also, and when he is old enough choose some
English girl. I have sworn a great oath before my God that he shall
never marry my daughter with my consent.

“‘Friend, I write to ask you something because I trust you more than
these slim agents. Half the price, a very poor one, that I have for my
farm is still unpaid to me by Jacobus van der Merve, who remains behind
and buys up all our lands. It is £100 English, due this day year, and I
enclose you power of attorney to receive and give receipt for the same.
Also there is due to me from your British Government £253 on account of
slaves liberated which were worth quite £1,000. This also the paper
gives you authority to receive. As regards my claims against the said
cursed Government because of the loss brought on me by the Quabie
Kaffirs, it will not acknowledge them, saying that the attack was
caused by the Frenchman Leblanc, one of my household.’”

“And with good reason,” commented my father.

“‘When you have received these monies, if ever, I pray you take some
safe opportunity of sending them to me, wherever I may be, which
doubtless you will hear in due course, although by that time I hope to
be rich again and not to need money. Farewell and God be with you, as I
hope He will be with me and Marie and the rest of us trek-Boers. The
bearer will overtake us with your answer at our first outspan.

“‘HENRI MARAIS.’”

“Well,” said my father with a sigh, “I suppose I must accept his trust,
though why he should choose an ‘accursed Englishman’ with whom he has
quarrelled violently to collect his debts instead of one of his own
beloved Boers, I am sure I do not know. I will go and write to him.
Allan, see that the messenger and his horse get something to eat.”

I nodded and went to the man, who was one of those that had defended
Maraisfontein with me, a good fellow unless he got near liquor.

“Heer Allan,” he said, looking round to see that we were not overheard,
“I have a little writing for you also,” and he produced from his pouch
a note that was unaddressed.

I tore it open eagerly. Within was written in French, which no Boer
would understand if the letter fell into his hands:

“Be brave and faithful, and remember, as I shall. Oh! love of my heart,
adieu, adieu!”

This message was unsigned; but what need was there of signature?

I wrote an answer of a sort that may be imagined, though what the exact
words were I cannot remember after the lapse of nearly half a century.
Oddly enough, it is the things I said which I recall at such a distance
of time rather than the things which I wrote, perhaps because, when
once written, my mind being delivered, troubled itself with them no
more. So in due course the Hottentot departed with my father’s letter
and my own, and that was the last direct communication which we had
with Henri or Marie Marais for more than a year.

I think that those long months were on the whole the most wretched I
have ever spent. The time of life which I was passing through is always
trying; that period of emergence from youth into full and responsible
manhood which in Africa generally takes place earlier than it does here
in England, where young men often seem to me to remain boys up to
five-and-twenty. The circumstances which I have detailed made it
particularly so in my own case, for here was I, who should have been
but a cheerful lad, oppressed with the sorrows and anxieties, and
fettered by the affections of maturity.

I could not get Marie out of my mind; her image was with me by day and
by night, especially by night, which caused me to sleep badly. I became
morose, supersensitive, and excitable. I developed a cough, and
thought, as did others, that I was going into a decline. I remember
that Hans even asked me once if I would not come and peg out the exact
place where I should like to be buried, so that I might be sure that
there would be no mistake made when I could no longer speak for myself.
On that occasion I kicked Hans, one of the few upon which I have ever
touched a native. The truth was that I had not the slightest intention
of being buried. I wanted to live and marry Marie, not to die and be
put in a hole by Hans. Only I saw no prospect of marrying Marie, or
even of seeing her again, and that was why I felt low-spirited.

Of course, from time to time news of the trek-Boers reached us, but it
was extremely confused. There were so many parties of them; their
adventures were so difficult to follow, and, I may add, often so
terrible; so few of them could write; trustworthy messengers were so
scanty; distances were so great. At any rate, we heard nothing of
Marais’s band except a rumour that they had trekked to a district in
what is now the Transvaal, which is called Rustenberg, and thence on
towards Delagoa Bay into an unknown veld where they had vanished. From
Marie herself no letter came, which showed me clearly enough that she
had not found an opportunity of sending one.

Observing my depressed condition, my father suggested as a remedy that
I should go to the theological college at Cape Town and prepare myself
for ordination. But the Church as a career did not appeal to me,
perhaps because I felt that I could never be sufficiently good; perhaps
because I knew that as a clergyman I should find no opportunity of
travelling north when my call came. For I always believed that this
call would come.

My father, who wished that I should hear another kind of call, was
vexed with me over this matter. He desired earnestly that I should
follow the profession which he adorned, and indeed saw no other open
for me any more than I did myself. Of course he was right in a way,
seeing that in the end I found none, unless big game hunting and Kaffir
trading can be called a profession. I don’t know, I am sure. Still,
poor business as it may be, I say now when I am getting towards the end
of life that I am glad I did not follow any other. It has suited me;
that was the insignificant hole in the world’s affairs which I was
destined to fit, whose only gifts were a remarkable art of straight
shooting and the more common one of observation mixed with a little
untrained philosophy.

So hot did our arguments become about this subject of the Church, for,
as may be imagined, in the course of them I revealed some unorthodoxy,
especially as regards the matter of our methods of Christianising
Kaffirs, that I was extremely thankful when a diversion occurred which
took me away from home. The story of my defence of Maraisfontein had
spread far, and that of my feats of shooting, especially in the Goose
Kloof, still farther. So the end of it was that those in authority
commandeered me to serve in one of the continual Kaffir frontier wars
which was in progress, and instantly gave me a commission as a kind of
lieutenant in a border corps.

Now the events of that particular war have nothing to do with the
history that I am telling, so I do not propose even to touch on them. I
served in it for a year, meeting with many adventures, one or two
successes, and several failures. Once I was wounded slightly, twice I
but just escaped with my life. Once I was reprimanded for taking a
foolish risk and losing some men. Twice I was commended for what were
called gallant actions, such as bringing a wounded comrade out of
danger under a warm fire, mostly of assegais, and penetrating by night,
almost alone, into the stronghold of a chieftain, and shooting him.

At length that war was patched up with an inconclusive peace and my
corps was disbanded. I returned home, no longer a lad, but a man with
experience of various kinds and a rather unique knowledge of Kaffirs,
their languages, history, and modes of thought and action. Also I had
associated a good deal with British officers, and from them acquired
much that I had found no opportunity of studying before, especially, I
hope, the ideas and standards of English gentlemen.

I had not been back at the Mission Station more than three weeks, quite
long enough for me to begin to be bored with idleness and inactivity,
when that call for which I had been waiting came at last.

One day a _smous_, that is a low kind of white man, often a Jew, who
travels about trading with unsophisticated Boers and Kaffirs, and
cheating them if he can, called at the station with his cartful of
goods. I was about to send him away, having no liking for such gentry,
when he asked me if I were named Allan Quatermain. I said “Yes,”
whereon he replied that he had a letter for me, and produced a packet
wrapped up in sail-cloth. I asked him whence he had it, and he answered
from a man whom he had met at Port Elizabeth, an east coast trader,
who, hearing that he was coming into the Cradock district, entrusted
him with the letter. The man told him that it was very important, and
that I should reward the bearer well if it were delivered safely.

While the Jew talked (I think he was a Jew) I was opening the
sail-cloth. Within was a piece of linen which had been oiled to keep
out water, addressed in some red pigment to myself or my father. This,
too, I opened, not without difficulty, for it was carefully sewn up,
and found within it a letter-packet, also addressed to myself or my
father, in the handwriting of Marie.

Great Heaven! How my heart jumped at that sight! Calling to Hans to
make the _smous_ comfortable and give him food, I went into my own
room, and there read the letter, which ran thus:

“MY DEAR ALLAN,—I do not know whether the other letters I have written
to you have ever come to your hands, or indeed if this one will. Still,
I send it on chance by a wandering Portuguese half-breed who is going
to Delagoa Bay, about fifty miles, I believe, from the place where I
now write, near the Crocodile River. My father has named it
Maraisfontein, after our old home. If those letters reached you, you
will have learned of the terrible things we went through on our
journey; the attacks by the Kaffirs in the Zoutpansberg region, who
destroyed one of our parties altogether, and so forth. If not, all that
story must wait, for it is too long to tell now, and, indeed, I have
but little paper, and not much pencil. It will be enough to say,
therefore, that to the number of thirty-five white people, men, women
and children, we trekked at the beginning of the summer season, when
the grass was commencing to grow, from the Lydenburg district—an awful
journey over mountains and through flooded rivers. After many delays,
some of them months long, we reached this place, about eight weeks ago,
for I write to you at the beginning of June, if we have kept correct
account of the time, of which I am not certain.

“It is a beautiful place to look at, a flat country of rich veld, with
big trees growing on it, and about two miles from the great river that
is called the Crocodile. Here, finding good water, my father and Hernan
Pereira, who now rules him in all things, determined to settle,
although some of the others wished to push on nearer to Delagoa Bay.
There was a great quarrel about it, but in the end my father, or rather
Hernan, had his will, as the oxen were worn out and many had already
died from the bites of a poisonous fly which is called the tsetse. So
we lotted out the land, of which there is enough for hundreds, and
began to build rude houses.

“Then trouble came upon us. The Kaffirs stole most of our horses,
although they have not dared to attack us, and except two belonging to
Hernan, the rest died of the sickness, the last of them but yesterday.
The oxen, too, have all died of the tsetse bites or other illnesses.
But the worst is that although this country looks so healthy, it is
poisoned with fever, which comes up, I think, in the mists from the
river. Already out of the thirty-five of us, ten are dead, two men,
three women, and five children, while more are sick. As yet my father
and I and my cousin Pereira have, by God’s mercy, kept quite well; but
although we are all very strong, how long this will continue I cannot
tell. Fortunately we have plenty of ammunition and the place is thick
with game, so that those of the men who remain strong can kill all the
food we want, even shooting on foot, and we women have made a great
quantity of biltong by salting flesh and drying it in the sun. So we
shall not actually starve for a long while, even if the game goes away.

“But, dear Allan, unless help comes to us I think that we shall die
every one, for God alone knows the miseries that we suffer and the
horrible sights of sickness and death that are around us. At this
moment there lies by me a little girl who is dying of fever.

“Oh, Allan, if you can help us, do so! Because of our sick it is
impossible for us to get to Delagoa Bay, and if we did we have no money
to buy anything there, for all that we had with us was lost in a wagon
in a flooded river. It was a great sum, for it included Hernan’s rich
fortune which he brought from the Cape with him in gold. Nor can we
move anywhere else, for we have no cattle or horses. We have sent to
Delagoa Bay, where we hear these are to be had, to try to buy them on
credit; but my cousin Hernan’s relations, of whom he used to talk so
much, are dead or gone away, and no one will trust us. With the
neighbouring Kaffirs, too, who have plenty of cattle, we have
quarrelled since, unfortunately, my cousin and some of the other Boers
tried to take certain beasts of theirs without payment. So we are quite
helpless, and can only wait for death.

“Allan, my father says that he asked your father to collect some monies
that were owing to him. If it were possible for you or other friends to
come to Delagoa in a ship with that money, I think that it might serve
to buy some oxen, enough for a few wagons. Then perhaps we might trek
back and fall in with a party of Boers who, we believe, have crossed
the Quathlamba Mountains into Natal. Or perhaps we might get to the Bay
and find a ship to take us anywhere from this horrible place. If you
could come, the natives would guide you to where we are.

“But it is too much to hope that you will come, or that if you do come
you will find us still alive.

“Allan, my dearest, I have one more thing to say, though I must say it
shortly, for the paper is nearly finished. I do not know, supposing
that you are alive and well, whether you still care for me, who left
you so long ago—it seems years and years—but _my_ heart is where it
was, and where I promised it should remain, in your keeping. Of course,
Hernan has pressed me to marry him, and my father has wished it. But I
have always said no, and now, in our wretchedness, there is no more
talk of marriage at present, which is the one good thing that has
happened to me. And, Allan, before so very long I shall be of age, if I
live. Still I dare say you no longer think of marriage with me, who,
perhaps, are already married to someone else, especially as now I and
all of us are no better than wandering beggars. Yet I have thought it
right to tell you these things, which you may like to know.

“Oh, why did God ever put it into my father’s heart to leave the Cape
Colony just because he hated the British Government and Hernan Pereira
and others persuaded him? I know not, but, poor man, he is sorry enough
now. It is pitiful to see him; at times I think that he is going mad.

“The paper is done, and the messenger is going; also the sick child is
dying and I must attend to her. Will this letter ever come to your
hands, I wonder? I am sending with it the little money I have to pay
for its delivery—about four pounds English. If not, there is an end. If
it does, and you cannot come or send others, at least pray for us. I
dream of you by night and think of you by day, for how much I love you
I cannot tell.

“In life or death I am

“Your MARIE.”

Such was this awful letter. I still have it; it lies before me, those
ragged sheets of paper covered with faint pencil-writing that is
blotted here and there with tear marks, some of them the tears of Marie
who wrote, some of them the tears of me who read. I wonder if there
exists a more piteous memorial of the terrible sufferings of the
trek-Boers, and especially of such of them as forced their way into the
poisonous veld around Delagoa, as did this Marais expedition and those
under the command of Triechard. Better, like many of their people, to
have perished at once by the spears of Umzilikazi and other savages
than to endure these lingering tortures of fever and starvation.

As I finished reading this letter my father, who had been out visiting
some of his Mission Kaffirs, entered the house, and I went into the
sitting-room to meet him.

“Why, Allan, what is the matter with you?” he asked, noting my
tear-stained face.

I gave him the letter, for I could not speak, and with difficulty he
deciphered it.

“Merciful God, what dreadful news!” he said when he had finished.
“Those poor people! those poor, misguided people! What can be done for
them?”

“I know one thing that can be done, father, or at any rate can be
attempted. I can try to reach them.”

“Are you mad?” he asked. “How is it possible for you, one man, to get
to Delagoa Bay, buy cattle, and rescue these folk, who probably are now
all dead?”

“The first two things are possible enough, father. Some ship will take
me to the Bay. You have Marais’s money, and I have that five hundred
pounds which my old aunt in England left me last year. Thank Heaven!
owing to my absence on commando, it still lies untouched in the bank at
Port Elizabeth. That is about eight hundred pounds in all, which would
buy a great many cattle and other things. As for the third, it is not
in our hands, is it? It may be that they cannot be rescued, it may be
that they are dead. I can only go to see.”

“But, Allan, Allan, you are my only son, and if you go it is probable
that I shall never see you more.”

“I have been through more dangers lately, father, and am still alive
and well. Moreover, if Marie is dead”—I paused, then went on
passionately—“Do not try to stop me, for I tell you, father, I will not
be stopped. Think of the words in that letter and what a shameless
hound I should be if I sat here quiet while Marie is dying yonder.
Would you have done so if Marie had been my mother?”

“No,” answered the old gentleman, “I should not. Go, and God be with
you, Allan, and me also, for I never expect to see you again.” And he
turned his head aside for a while.

Then we went into matters. The _smous_ was summoned and asked about the
ship which brought the letter from Delagoa. It seemed that she was an
English-owned brig known as the _Seven Stars_, and that her captain,
one Richardson, proposed to sail back to the Bay on the morrow, that
was the third of July, or in other words, within twenty-four hours.

Twenty-four hours! And Port Elizabeth was one hundred and eighteen
miles away, and the _Seven Stars_ might leave earlier if she had
completed her cargo and wind and weather served. Moreover, if she did
leave, it might be weeks or months before any other ship sailed for
Delagoa Bay, for in those days, of course, there were no mail boats.

I looked at my watch. It was four o’clock in the afternoon, and from a
calendar we had, which gave the tides at Port Elizabeth and other South
African harbours, it did not seem probable that the _Seven Stars_ would
sail, if she kept to her date, before about eight on the morrow. One
hundred and twenty miles to be covered in, say, fourteen hours over
rough country with some hills! Well, on the other hand, the roads were
fairly good and dry, with no flooded rivers to cross, although there
might be one to swim, and there was a full moon. It could be
done—barely, and now I was glad indeed that Hernan Pereira had not won
my swift mare in that shooting match.

I called to Hans, who was loafing about outside, and said quietly:

“I ride to Port Elizabeth, and must be there by eight o’clock to-morrow
morning.”

“Allemachte!” exclaimed Hans, who had been that road several times.

“You will go with me, and from Port Elizabeth on to Delagoa Bay. Saddle
the mare and the roan horse, and put a headstall on the chestnut to
lead with you as a spare. Give them all a feed, but no water. We start
in half an hour.” Then I added certain directions as to the guns we
would take, saddle-bags, clothes, blankets and other details, and bade
him start about the business.

Hans never hesitated. He had been with me through my recent campaign,
and was accustomed to sudden orders. Moreover, I think that if I had
told him I was riding to the moon, beyond his customary exclamation of
“Allemachte!” he would have made no objection to accompanying me
thither.

The next half-hour was a busy time for me. Henri Marais’s money had to
be got out of the strong box and arranged in a belt of buck’s hide that
I had strapped about me. A letter had to be written by my father to the
manager of the Port Elizabeth bank, identifying me as the owner of the
sum lodged there in my name. A meal must be eaten and some food
prepared for us to carry. The horses’ shoes had to be seen to, and a
few clothes packed in the saddle-bags. Also there were other things
which I have forgotten. Yet within five-and-thirty minutes the long,
lean mare stood before the door. Behind her, with a tall crane’s
feather in his hat, was Hans, mounted on the roan stallion, and leading
the chestnut, a four-year-old which I had bought as a foal on the mare
as part of the bargain. Having been corn fed from a colt it was a very
sound and well-grown horse, though not the equal of its mother in
speed.

In the passage my poor old father, who was quite bewildered by the
rapidity and urgent nature of this business, embraced me.

“God bless you, my dear boy,” he said. “I have had little time to
think, but I pray that this may be all for the best, and that we may
meet again in the world. But if not, remember what I have taught you,
and if I survive you, for my part I shall remember that you died trying
to do your duty. Oh, what trouble has the blind madness of Henri Marais
brought upon us all! Well, I warned him that it would be so. Good-bye,
my dear boy, good-bye: my prayers will follow you, and for the
rest—Well, I am old, and what does it matter if my grey hairs come with
sorrow to the grave?”

I kissed him back, and with an aching heart sprang to the saddle. In
five more minutes the station was out of sight.

Thirteen and a half hours later I pulled rein upon the quay of Port
Elizabeth just, only just, in time to catch Captain Richardson as he
was entering his boat to row out to the _Seven Stars_, on which the
canvas was already being hoisted. As well as I could in my exhausted
state, I explained matters and persuaded him to wait till the next
tide. Then, thanking God for the mare’s speed—the roan had been left
foundered thirty miles away, and Hans was following on the chestnut,
but not yet up—I dragged the poor beast to an inn at hand. There she
lay down and died. Well, she had done her work, and there was no other
horse in the country that could have caught that boat.

An hour or so later Hans came in flogging the chestnut, and here I may
add that both it and the roan recovered. Indeed I rode them for many
years, until they were quite old. When I had eaten, or tried to eat
something and rested awhile, I went to the bank, succeeded in
explaining the state of the case to the manager, and after some
difficulty, for gold was not very plentiful in Port Elizabeth, procured
three hundred pounds in sovereigns. For the other two he gave me a bill
upon some agent in Delagoa Bay, together with a letter of
recommendation to him and the Portuguese governor, who, it appeared,
was in debt to their establishment. By an afterthought, however,
although I kept the letters, I returned him the bill and spent the £200
in purchasing a great variety of goods which I will not enumerate, that
I knew would be useful for trading purposes among the east coast
Kaffirs. Indeed, I practically cleared out the Port Elizabeth stores,
and barely had time, with the help of Hans and the storekeepers, to
pack and ship the goods before the _Seven Stars_ put out to sea.

Within twenty-four hours from the time I had left the Mission Station,
Hans and I saw behind us Port Elizabeth fading into the distance, and
in front a waste of stormy waters.




CHAPTER VIII.
THE CAMP OF DEATH


Everything went well upon that voyage, except with me personally. Not
having been on the ocean since I was a child, I, who am naturally no
good sailor, was extremely ill as day by day we ploughed through seas
that grew ever more rough. Also, strong as I was, that fearful ride had
overdone me. Added to these physical discomforts was my agonising
anxiety of mind, which I leave anyone with imagination to picture for
himself. Really there were times when I wished that the _Seven Stars_
would plunge headlong to the bottom of the deep and put an end to me
and my miseries.

These, however, so far as the bodily side of them was concerned, were,
I think, surpassed by those of my henchman Hans, who, as a matter of
fact, had never before set foot in any kind of boat. Perhaps this was
fortunate, since had he known the horrors of the ocean, much as he
loved me, he would, I am sure, by one means or another, have left me to
voyage in the _Seven Stars_ alone. There he lay upon the floor of my
little cabin, rolling to and fro with the violent motion of the brig,
overcome with terror. He was convinced that we were going to be
drowned, and in the intervals of furious sea-sickness uttered piteous
lamentations in Dutch, English, and various native tongues, mingled
with curses and prayers of the most primitive and realistic order.

After the first twenty-four hours or so he informed me with many moans
that the last bit of his inside had just come out of him, and that he
was now quite hollow “like a gourd.” Also he declared that all these
evils had fallen upon him because he had been fool enough to forsake
the religion of his people (what was that, I wonder), and allow himself
to be “washed white,” that is, be baptised, by my father.

I answered that as he had become white instead of staying yellow, I
advised him to remain so, since it was evident that the Hottentot gods
would have nothing more to do with one who had deserted them. Thereon
he made a dreadful face, which even in the midst of my own woes caused
me to laugh at him, uttered a prolonged groan, and became so silent
that I thought he must be dead. However, the sailor who brought me my
food—such food!—assured me that this was not so, and lashed him tight
to the legs of the bunk by his arm and ankle so as to prevent him from
being rolled to bits.

Next morning Hans was dosed with brandy, which, in his empty condition,
made him extremely drunk, and from that time forward began to take a
more cheerful view of things. Especially was this so when the hours for
the “brandy medicine” came round. Hans, like most other Hottentots,
loved spirits, and would put up with much to get them, even with my
father’s fiery indignation.

I think it was on the fourth day that at length we pitched and rolled
ourselves over the shallow bar of Port Natal and found ourselves at
peace for a while under shelter of the Point in the beautiful bay upon
the shores of which the town of Durban now stands. Then it was but a
miserable place, consisting of a few shanties which were afterwards
burnt by the Zulus, and a number of Kaffir huts. For such white men as
dwelt there had for the most part native followings, and, I may add,
native wives.

We spent two days at this settlement of Durban, where Captain
Richardson had some cargo to land for the English settlers, one or two
of whom had started a trade with the natives and with parties of the
emigrant Boers who were beginning to enter the territory by the
overland route. Those days I passed on shore, though I would not allow
Hans to accompany me lest he should desert, employing my time in
picking up all the information I could about the state of affairs,
especially with reference to the Zulus, a people with whom I was
destined ere long to make an intimate acquaintance. Needless to say, I
inquired both from natives and from white men whether anything was
known of the fate of Marais’s party, but no one seemed even to have
heard of them. One thing I did learn, however, that my old friend,
Pieter Retief, with a large following, had crossed the Quathlamba
Mountains, which we now know as the Drakensberg, and entered the
territory of Natal. Here they proposed to settle if they could get the
leave of the Zulu king, Dingaan, a savage potentate of whom and of
whose armies everyone seemed to live in terror.

On the third morning, to my great relief, for I was terrified lest we
should be delayed, the _Seven Stars_ sailed with a favouring wind.
Three days later we entered the harbour of Delagoa, a sheet of water
many miles long and broad. Notwithstanding its shallow entrance, it is
the best natural port in Southeastern Africa, but now, alas! lost to
the English.

Six hours later we anchored opposite a sandbank on which stood a
dilapidated fort and a dirty settlement known as Lorenzo Marquez, where
the Portuguese kept a few soldiers, most of them coloured. I pass over
my troubles with the Customs, if such they could be called. Suffice it
to say that ultimately I succeeded in landing my goods, on which the
duty chargeable was apparently enormous. This I did by distributing
twenty-five English sovereigns among various officials, beginning with
the acting-governor and ending with a drunken black sweep who sat in a
kind of sentry box on the quay.

Early next morning the _Seven Stars_ sailed again, because of some
quarrel with the officials, who threatened to seize her—I forget why.
Her destination was the East African ports and, I think, Madagascar,
where a profitable trade was to be done in carrying cattle and slaves.
Captain Richardson said he might be back at Lorenzo Marquez in two or
three months’ time, or he might not. As a matter of fact the latter
supposition proved correct, for the _Seven Stars_ was lost on a
sandbank somewhere up the coast, her crew only escaping to Mombasa
after enduring great hardships.

Well, she had served my turn, for I heard afterwards that no other ship
put into the Bay for a whole year from the date she left it. So if I
had not caught her at Port Elizabeth I could not have come at all,
except, of course, overland. This at best must have taken many months,
and was moreover a journey that no man could enter on alone.

Now I get back to my story again.

There was no inn at Lorenzo Marquez. Through the kindness of one of his
native or half-breed wives, who could talk a little Dutch, I managed,
however, to get a lodging in a tumble-down house belonging to a
dissolute person who called himself Don José Ximenes, but who was
really himself a half-breed. Here good fortune befriended me. Don José,
when sober, was a trader with the natives, and a year before had
acquired from them two good buck wagons. Probably they were stolen from
some wandering Boers or found derelict after their murder or death by
fever. These wagons he was only too glad to sell for a song. I think I
gave him twenty pounds English for the two, and thirty more for twelve
oxen that he had bought at the same time as the wagons. They were fine
beasts of the Afrikander breed, that after a long rest had grown quite
fat and strong.

Of course twelve oxen were not enough to draw two wagons, or even one.
Therefore, hearing that there were natives on the mainland who
possessed plenty of cattle, I at once gave out that I was ready to buy,
and pay well in blankets, cloth, beads and so forth. The result was
that within two days I had forty or fifty to choose from, small animals
of the Zulu character and, I should add, unbroken. Still they were
sturdy and used to that veld and its diseases. Here it was that my
twelve trained beasts came in. By putting six of them to each wagon,
two as fore- and two as after-oxen, and two in the middle, Hans and I
were able to get the other ten necessary to make up a team of sixteen
under some sort of control.

Heavens! how we worked during the week or so which went by before it
was possible for me to leave Lorenzo Marquez. What with mending up and
loading the wagons, buying and breaking in the wild oxen, purchasing
provisions, hiring native servants—of whom I was lucky enough to secure
eight who belonged to one of the Zulu tribes and desired to get back to
their own country, whence they had wandered with some Boers, I do not
think that we slept more than two or three hours out of the
twenty-four.

But, it may be asked, what was my aim, whither went I, what inquiries
had I made? To answer the last question first, I had made every
possible inquiry, but with little or no result. Marie’s letter had said
that they were encamped on the bank of the Crocodile River, about fifty
miles from Delagoa Bay. I asked everyone I met among the
Portuguese—who, after all, were not many—if they had heard of such an
encampment of emigrant Boers. But these Portuguese appeared to have
heard nothing, except my host, Don José, who had a vague recollection
of something—he could not remember what.

The fact was at this time the few people who lived at Lorenzo Marquez
were too sodden with liquor and other vices to take any interest in
outside news that did not immediately concern them. Moreover, the
natives whom they flogged and oppressed if they were their servants, or
fought with if they were not, told them little, and almost nothing that
was true, for between the two races there was an hereditary hate
stretching back for generations. So from the Portuguese I gained no
information.

Then I turned to the Kaffirs, especially to those from whom I had
bought the cattle. _They_ had heard that some Boers reached the banks
of the Crocodile moons ago—how many they could not tell. But that
country, they said, was under the rule of a chief who was hostile to
them, and killed any of their people who ventured thither. Therefore
they knew nothing for certain. Still, one of them stated that a woman
whom he had bought as a slave, and who had passed through the district
in question a few weeks before, told him that someone had told her that
these Boers were all dead of sickness. She added that she had seen
their wagon caps from a distance, so, if they were dead, “their wagons
were still alive.”

I asked to see this woman, but the native refused to produce her. After
a great deal of talk, however, he offered to sell her to me, saying
that he was tired of her. So I bargained with the man and finally
agreed for her purchase for three pounds of copper wire and eight yards
of blue cloth. Next morning she was produced, an extremely ugly person
with a large, flat nose, who came from somewhere in the interior of
Africa, having, I gathered, been taken captive by Arabs and sold from
hand to hand. Her name, as near as I can pronounce it, was Jeel.

I had great difficulty in establishing communication with her, but
ultimately found that one of my newly hired Kaffirs could understand
something of her language. Even then it was hard to make her talk, for
she had never seen a white man, and thought I had bought her for some
dreadful purpose or other. However, when she found that she was kindly
treated, she opened her lips and told me the same story that her late
master had repeated, neither more nor less. Finally I asked her whether
she could guide me to the place where she had seen the “live wagons.”

She answered: “Oh, yes,” as she had travelled many roads and never
forgot any of them.

This, of course, was all I wanted from the woman, who, I may add,
ultimately gave me a good deal of trouble. The poor creature seemed
never to have experienced kindness, and her gratitude for the little I
showed her was so intense that it became a nuisance. She followed me
about everywhere, trying to do me service in her savage way, and even
attempted to seize my food and chew it before I put it into my own
mouth—to save me the trouble, I suppose. Ultimately I married her,
somewhat against her will, I fear, to one of the hired Kaffirs, who
made her a very good husband, although when he was dismissed from my
service she wanted to leave him and follow me.

At length, under the guidance of this woman, Jeel, we made a start.
There were but fifty miles to go, a distance that on a fair road any
good horse would cover in eight hours, or less. But we had no horses,
and there was no road—nothing but swamps and bush and rocky hills. With
our untrained cattle it took us three days to travel the first twelve
miles, though after that things went somewhat better.

It may be asked, why did I not send on? But whom could I send when no
one knew the way, except the woman, Jeel, whom I feared to part with
lest I should see her no more? Moreover, what was the use of sending,
since the messengers could take no help? If everyone at the camp was
dead, as rumour told us—well, they were dead. And if they lived, the
hope was that they might live a little longer. Meanwhile, I dared not
part with my guide, nor dared I leave the relief wagons to go on with
her alone. If I did so, I knew that I should never see them again,
since only the prestige of their being owned by a white man who was not
a Portuguese prevented the natives from looting them.

It was a truly awful journey. My first idea had been to follow the
banks of the Crocodile River, which is what I should have attempted had
I not chanced on the woman, Jeel. Lucky was it that I did not do so,
since I found afterwards that this river wound about a great deal and
was joined by impassable tributaries. Also it was bordered by forests.
Jeel’s track, on the contrary, followed an old slave road that, bad as
it was, avoided the swampy places of the surrounding country, and those
native tribes which the experience of generations of the traders in
this iniquitous traffic showed to be most dangerous.

Nine days of fearful struggle had gone by. We had camped one night
below the crest of a long slope strewn with great rocks, many of which
we were obliged to roll out of the path by main force in order to make
a way for the wagons. The oxen had to lie in their yokes all night,
since we dared not let them loose fearing lest they should stray; also
lions were roaring in the distance, although, game being plentiful,
these did not come near to us. As soon as there was any light we let
out the teams to fill themselves on the tussocky grass that grew about,
and meanwhile cooked and ate some food.

Presently the sun rose, and I saw that beneath us was a great stretch
of plain covered with mist, and to the north, on our right, several
denser billows of mist that marked the course of the Crocodile River.

By degrees this mist lifted, tall tops of trees appearing above it,
till at length it thinned into vapour that vanished away as the sun
rose. As I watched it idly, the woman, Jeel, crept up to me in her
furtive fashion, touched me on the shoulder and pointed to a distant
group of trees.

Looking closely at these trees, I saw between them what at first I took
for some white rocks. Further examination, as the mist cleared,
suggested to my mind, however, that they might be wagon tilts. Just
then the Zulu who understood Jeel’s talk came up. I asked him as well
as I could, for at that time my knowledge of his tongue was very
imperfect, what she wished to say. He questioned her, and answered that
she desired to tell me that those were the moving houses of the
Amaboona (the Boer people), just where she had seen them nearly two
moons ago.

At this tidings my heart seemed to stand still, so that for more than a
minute I could not speak. There were the wagons at last, but—oh! who
and what should I find in them? I called Hans and bade him inspan as
quickly as possible, explaining to him that yonder was Marais’s camp.

“Why not let the oxen fill themselves first, baas?” he answered. “There
is no hurry, for though the wagons are there, no doubt all the people
are dead long ago.”

“Do what I bid you, you ill-omened beast,” I said, “instead of croaking
of death like a crow. And listen: I am going to walk forward to that
camp; you must follow with the wagons as fast as they can travel.”

“No, baas, it is not safe that you should go alone. Kaffirs or wild
beasts might take you.”

“Safe or not, I am going; but if you think it wise, tell two of those
Zulus to come with me.”

A few minutes later I was on the road, followed by the two Kaffirs
armed with spears. In my youth I was a good runner, being strong of leg
and light in body, but I do not think that I ever covered seven miles,
for that was about the distance to the camp, in quicker time than I did
that morning. Indeed, I left those active Kaffirs so far behind that
when I approached the trees they were not in sight. Here I dropped to a
walk, as I said to myself—to get my breath. Really it was because I
felt so terrified at what I might find that I delayed the discovery
just for one minute more. While I approached, hope, however faint,
still remained; when I arrived, hope might be replaced by everlasting
despair.

Now I could see that there were some shanties built behind the wagons,
doubtless those “rude houses” of which Marie had written. But I could
not see anyone moving about them, or any cattle or any smoke, or other
sign of life. Nor could I hear a single sound.

Doubtless, thought I to myself, Hans is right. They are all long dead.

My agony of suspense was replaced by an icy calm. At length I knew the
worst. It was finished—I had striven in vain. I walked through the
outlying trees and between two of the wagons. One of these I noticed,
as we do notice things at such times, was the same in which Marais had
trekked with his daughter, his favourite wagon that once I had helped
to fit with a new dissel-boom.

Before me were the rough houses built of the branches of trees, daubed
over with mud, or rather the backs of them, for they faced west. I
stood still for a moment, and as I stood thought that I heard a faint
sound as of someone reciting slowly. I crept along the end of the
outermost house and, rubbing the cold sweat from my eyes, peeped round
the corner, for it occurred to me that savages might be in possession.
Then I saw what caused the sound. A tattered, blackened, bearded man
stood at the head of a long and shallow hole saying a prayer.

It was Henri Marais, although at the time I did not recognise him, so
changed was he. A number of little mounds to the right and left of him
told me, however, that the hole was a grave. As I watched two more men
appeared, dragging between them the body of a woman, which evidently
they had not strength to carry, as its legs trailed upon the ground.
From the shape of the corpse it seemed to be that of a tall young
woman, but the features I could not see, because it was being dragged
face downwards. Also the long hair hanging from the head hid them. It
was dark hair, like Marie’s. They reached the grave, and tumbled their
sad burden into it; but I—I could not stir!

At length my limbs obeyed my will. I went forward to the men and said
in a hollow voice in Dutch:

“Whom do you bury?”

“Johanna Meyer,” answered someone mechanically, for they did not seem
to have taken the trouble to look at me. As I listened to those words
my heart, which had stood still waiting for the answer, beat again with
a sudden bound that I could hear in the silence.

I looked up. There, advancing from the doorway of one of the houses,
very slowly, as though overpowered by weakness, and leading by the hand
a mere skeleton of a child, who was chewing some leaves, I saw—I saw
_Marie Marais!_ She was wasted to nothing, but I could not mistake her
eyes, those great soft eyes that had grown so unnaturally large in the
white, thin face.

She too saw me and stared for one moment. Then, loosing the child, she
cast up her hands, through which the sunlight shone as through
parchment, and slowly sank to the ground.

“She has gone, too,” said one of the men in an indifferent voice. “I
thought she would not last another day.”

Now for the first time the man at the head of the grave turned. Lifting
his hand, he pointed to me, whereon the other two men turned also.

“God above us!” he said in a choked voice, “at last I am quite mad.
Look! there stands the _spook_ of young Allan, the son of the English
prédicant who lived near Cradock.”

As soon as I heard the voice I knew the speaker.

“Oh, Mynheer Marais!” I cried, “I am no ghost, I am Allan himself come
to save you.”

Marais made no answer; he seemed bewildered. But one of the men cried
out crazily:

“How can you save us, youngster, unless you are ready to be eaten?
Don’t you see, we starve, we starve!”

“I have wagons and food,” I answered.

“Allemachte! Henri,” exclaimed the man, with a wild laugh, “do you hear
what your English _spook_ says? He says that he has wagons and _food,
food, food!_”

Then Marais burst into tears and flung himself upon my breast, nearly
knocking me down. I wrenched myself free of him and ran to Marie, who
was lying face upwards on the ground. She seemed to hear my step, for
her eyes opened and she struggled to a sitting posture.

“Is it really you, Allan, or do I dream?” she murmured.

“It is I, it is I,” I answered, lifting her to her feet, for she seemed
to weigh no more than a child. Her head fell upon my shoulder, and she
too began to weep.

Still holding her, I turned to the men and said:

“Why do you starve when there is game all about?” and I pointed to two
fat elands strolling among the trees not more than a hundred and fifty
yards away.

“Can we kill game with stones?” asked one of them, “we whose powder was
all burnt a month ago. Those buck,” he added, with a wild laugh, “come
here to mock us every morning; but they will not walk into our
pitfalls. They know them too well, and we have no strength to dig
others.”

Now when I left my wagons I had brought with me that same Purdey rifle
with which I had shot the geese in the match against Pereira, choosing
it because it was so light to carry. I held up my hand for silence, set
Marie gently on the ground, and began to steal towards the elands.
Taking what shelter I could, I got within a hundred yards of them, when
suddenly they took alarm, being frightened, in fact, by my two Zulu
servants, who were now arriving.

Off they galloped, the big bull leading, and vanished behind some
trees. I saw their line, and that they would appear again between two
clumps of bush about two hundred and fifty yards away. Hastily I raised
the full sight on the rifle, which was marked for two hundred yards,
lifted it, and waited, praying to God as I did so that my skill might
not fail me.

The bull appeared, its head held forward, its long horns lying flat
upon the back. The shot was very long, and the beast very large to
bring down with so small a bullet. I aimed right forward—clear of it,
indeed—high too, in a line with its backbone, and pressed the trigger.

The rifle exploded, the bullet clapped, and the buck sprang forward
faster than ever. I had failed! But what was this? Suddenly the great
bull swung round and began to gallop towards us. When it was not more
than fifty yards away, it fell in a heap, rolled twice over like a shot
rabbit, and lay still. That bullet was in its heart.

The two Kaffirs appeared breathless and streaming with perspiration.

“Cut meat from the eland’s flank; don’t stop to skin it,” I said in my
broken Zulu, helping the words out with signs.

They understood, and a minute later were at work with their assegais.
Then I looked about me. Near by lay a store of dead branches placed
there for fuel.

“Have you fire?” I asked of the skeleton Boers, for they were nothing
more.

“_Nein, nein_,” they answered; “our fire is dead.”

I produced the tinder-box which I carried with me, and struck the
flint. Ten minutes later we had a cheerful blaze, and within
three-quarters of an hour good soup, for iron pots were not
wanting—only food to put into them. I think that for the rest of that
day those poor creatures did little else but eat, sleeping between
their meals. Oh! the joy I had in feeding them, especially after the
wagons arrived, bringing with them salt—how they longed for that
salt!—sugar and coffee.




CHAPTER IX.
THE PROMISE


Of the original thirty-five souls, not reckoning natives, who had
accompanied Henri Marais upon his ill-fated expedition, there now
remained but nine alive at the new Maraisfontein. These were himself,
his daughter, four Prinsloos—a family of extraordinary constitution—and
three Meyers, being the husband of the poor woman I had seen committed
to the grave and two of her six children. The rest, Hernan Pereira
excepted, had died of fever and actual starvation, for when the fever
lessened with the change of the seasons, the starvation set in. It
appeared that, with the exception of a very little, they had stored
their powder in a kind of outbuilding which they constructed, placing
it at a distance for safety’s sake. When most of the surviving men were
away, however, a grass fire set light to this outbuilding and all the
powder blew up.

After this, for a while they supplied the camp with food by the help of
such ammunition as remained to them. When that failed they dug pits in
which to catch game. In time the buck came to know of these pits, so
that they snared no more.

Then, as the “biltong” or sun-dried meat they had made was all
consumed, they were driven to every desperate expedient that is known
to the starving, such as the digging up of bulbs, the boiling of grass,
twigs and leaves, the catching of lizards, and so forth. I believe that
they actually ate caterpillars and earthworms. But after their last
fire went out through the neglect of the wretched Kaffir who was left
to watch it, and having no tinder, they failed to relight it by
friction, of course even this food failed them. When I arrived they had
practically been three days without anything to eat except green leaves
and grass, such as I saw the child chewing. In another seventy hours
doubtless every one of them would have been dead.

Well, they recovered rapidly enough, for those who had survived its
ravages were evidently now impervious to fever. Who can tell the joy
that I experienced as I watched Marie returning from the very brink of
the grave to a state of full and lovely womanhood? After all, we were
not so far away from the primitive conditions of humanity, when the
first duty of man was to feed his women and his children, and I think
that something of that instinct remains with us. At least, I know I
never experienced a greater pleasure than I did, when the woman I
loved, the poor, starving woman, ate and ate of the food which _I_ was
able to give her—she who for weeks had existed upon locusts and herbs.

For the first few days we did not talk much except of the immediate
necessities of the hour, which occupied all our thoughts. Afterwards,
when Marais and his daughter were strong enough to bear it, we had some
conversation. He began by asking how I came to find them.

I replied, through Marie’s letter, which, it appeared, he knew nothing
of, for he had forbidden her to write to me.

“It seems fortunate that you were disobeyed, mynheer,” I said, to which
he answered nothing.

Then I told the tale of the arrival of that letter at the Mission
Station in the Cape Colony by the hand of a wandering _smous_, and of
my desperate ride upon the swift mare to Port Elizabeth, where I just
succeeded in catching the brig _Seven Stars_ before she sailed. Also I
told them of the lucky chances that enabled me to buy the wagons and
find a guide to their camp, reaching it but a few hours before it was
too late.

“It was a great deed,” said Henri Marais, taking the pipe from his
mouth, for I had brought tobacco among my stores. “But tell me, Allan,
why did you do it for the sake of one who has not treated you kindly?”

“I did it,” I answered, “for the sake of one who has always treated me
kindly,” and I nodded towards Marie, who was engaged in washing up the
cooking pots at a distance.

“I suppose so, Allan; but you know she is affianced to another.”

“I know that she is affianced to me, and to no other,” I answered
warmly, adding, “And pray where is this other? If he lives I do not see
him here.”

“No,” replied Marais in a curious voice. “The truth is, Allan, that
Hernan Pereira left us about a fortnight before you came. One horse
remained, which was his, and with two Hottentots, who were also his
servants, he rode back upon the track by which we came, to try to find
help. Since then we have heard nothing of him.”

“Indeed; and how did he propose to get food on the way?”

“He had a rifle, or rather they all three had rifles, and about a
hundred charges between them, which escaped the fire.”

“With a hundred charges of powder carefully used your camp would have
been fed for a month, or perhaps two months,” I remarked. “Yet he went
away with all of them—to find help?”

“That is so, Allan. We begged him to stay, but he would not; and, after
all, the charges were his own property. No doubt he thought he acted
for the best, especially as Marie would have none of him,” Marais added
with emphasis.

“Well,” I replied, “it seems that it is I who have brought you the
help, and not Pereira. Also, by the way, mynheer, I have brought you
the money my father collected on your account, and some £500 of my own,
or what is left of it, in goods and gold. Moreover, Marie does not
refuse me. Say, therefore, to which of us does she belong?”

“It would seem that it should be to you,” he answered slowly, “since
you have shown yourself so faithful, and were it not for you she would
now be lying yonder,” and he pointed to the little heaps that covered
the bones of most of the expedition. “Yes, yes, it would seem that it
should be to you, who twice have saved her life and once have saved
mine also.”

Now I suppose that he saw on my face the joy which I could not conceal,
for he added hastily: “Yet, Allan, years ago I swore on the Book before
God that never with my will should my daughter marry an Englishman,
even if he were a good Englishman. Also, just before we left the
Colony, I swore again, in her presence and that of Hernan Pereira, that
I would not give her to you, so I cannot break my oath, can I? If I
did, the good God would be avenged upon me.”

“Some might think that when I came here the good God was in the way of
being avenged upon you for the keeping of that evil oath,” I answered
bitterly, glancing, in my turn, at the graves.

“Yes, they might, Allan,” he replied without anger, for all his
troubles had induced a reasonable frame of mind in him—for a while.
“Yet, His ways are past finding out, are they not?”

Now my anger broke out, and, rising, I said:

“Do you mean, Mynheer Marais, that notwithstanding the love between us,
which you know is true and deep, and notwithstanding that I alone have
been able to drag both of you and the others out of the claws of death,
I am never to marry Marie? Do you mean that she is to be given to a
braggart who deserted her in her need?”

“And what if I do mean that, Allan?”

“This: although I am still young, as you know well I am a man who can
think and act for himself. Also, I am your master here—I have cattle
and guns and servants. Well, I will take Marie, and if any should try
to stop me, I know how to protect myself and her.”

This bold speech did not seem to surprise him in the least or to make
him think the worse of me. He looked at me for a while, pulling his
long beard in a meditative fashion, then answered:

“I dare say that at your age I should have played the same game, and it
is true that you have things in your fist. But, much as she may love
you, Marie would not go away with you and leave her father to starve.”

“Then you can come with us as my father-in-law, Mynheer Marais. At any
rate, it is certain that I will not go away and leave her here to
starve.”

Now I think that something which he saw in my eye showed him that I was
in earnest. At least, he changed his tone and began to argue, almost to
plead.

“Be reasonable, Allan,” he said. “How can you marry Marie when there is
no prédicant to marry you? Surely, if you love her so much, you would
not pour mud upon her name, even in this wilderness?”

“She might not think it mud,” I replied. “Men and women have been
married without the help of priests before now, by open declaration and
public report, for instance, and their children held to be born in
wedlock. I know that, for I have read of the law of marriage.”

“It may be, Allan, though I hold no marriage good unless the holy words
are said. But why do you not let me come to the end of my story?”

“Because I thought it was ended, Mynheer Marais.”

“Not so, Allan. I told you that I had sworn that she should never marry
you with my will. But when she is of age, which will be in some six
months’ time, my will counts no longer, seeing that then she is a free
woman who can dispose of herself. Also I shall be clear of my oath, for
no harm will come to my soul if that happens which I cannot help. Now
are you satisfied?”

“I don’t know,” I answered doubtfully, for somehow all Marais’s
casuistry, which I thought contemptible, did not convince me that he
was sincere. “I don’t know,” I repeated. “Much may chance in six
months.”

“Of course, Allan. For instance, Marie might change her mind and marry
someone else.”

“Or I might not be there to marry, mynheer. Accidents sometimes happen
to men who are not wanted, especially in wild countries or, for the
matter of that, to those who are.”

“Allemachte! Allan, you do not mean that I—”

“No, mynheer,” I interrupted; “but there are other people in the world
besides yourself—Hernan Pereira, for example, if he lives. Still, I am
not the only one concerned in this matter. There is Marie yonder. Shall
I call her?”

He nodded, preferring probably that I should speak to her in his
presence rather than alone.

So I called Marie, who was watching our talk somewhat anxiously while
she went about her tasks. She came at once, a very different Marie to
the starving girl of a while before, for although she was still thin
and drawn, her youth and beauty were returning to her fast under the
influences of good food and happiness.

“What is it, Allan?” she asked gently. I told her all, repeating our
conversation and the arguments which had been used on either side word
for word, as nearly as I could remember them.

“Is that right?” I asked of Marais when I had finished.

“It is right; you have a good memory,” he answered.

“Very well. And now what have you to say, Marie?”

“I, dear Allan? Why, this: My life belongs to you, who have twice saved
this body of mine from death, as my love and spirit belong to you.
Therefore, I should have thought it no shame if I had been given to you
here and now before the people, and afterwards married by a clergyman
when we found one. But my father has sworn an oath which weighs upon
his mind, and he has shown you that within six months—a short six
months—that oath dies of itself, since, by the law, he can no longer
control me. So, Allan, as I would not grieve him, or perhaps lead him
to say and do what is foolish, I think it would be well that we should
wait for those six months, if, on his part, he promises that he will
then do nothing to prevent our marriage.”

“_Ja, ja_, I promise that then I will do nothing to prevent your
marriage,” answered Marais eagerly, like one who has suddenly seen some
loophole of escape from an impossible position, adding, as though to
himself, “But God may do something to prevent it, for all that.”

“We are every one of us in the hand of God,” she replied in her sweet
voice. “Allan, you hear, my father has promised?”

“Yes, Marie, he has promised—after a fashion,” I replied gloomily, for
somehow his words struck a chill through me.

“I have promised, Allan, and I will keep my promise to you, as I have
kept my oath to God, attempting to work you no harm, and leaving all in
His hands. But you, on your part, must promise also that, till she is
of age, you will not take Marie as a wife—no, not if you were left
alone together in the veld. You must be as people who are affianced to
each other, no more.”

So, having no choice, I promised, though with a heavy heart. Then, I
suppose in order to make this solemn contract public, Marais called the
surviving Boers, who were loitering near, and repeated to them the
terms of the contract that we had made.

The men laughed and shrugged their shoulders. But Vrouw Prinsloo, I
remember, said outright that she thought the business foolish, since if
anyone had a right to Marie, I had, wherever I chose to take her. She
added that, as for Hernan Pereira, he was a “sneak and a stinkcat,” who
had gone off to save his own life, and left them all to die. If _she_
were Marie, should they meet again, she would greet him with a pailful
of dirty water in the face, as she herself meant to do if she got the
chance.

Vrouw Prinsloo, it will be observed, was a very outspoken woman and, I
may add, an honest one.

So this contract was settled. I have set it out at length because of
its importance in our story. But now I wish—ah! how I wish that I had
insisted upon being married to Marie then and there. If I had done so,
I think I should have carried my point, for I was the “master of many
legions” in the shape of cattle, food and ammunition, and rather than
risk a quarrel with me, the other Boers would have forced Marais to
give way. But we were young and inexperienced; also it was fated
otherwise. Who can question the decrees of Fate written immutably,
perhaps long before we were born, in the everlasting book of human
destinies?

Yet, when I had shaken off my first fears and doubts, my lot and
Marie’s were very happy, a perfect paradise, indeed, compared with what
we had gone through during that bitter time of silence and separation.
At any rate, we were acknowledged to be affianced by the little society
in which we lived, including her father, and allowed to be as much
alone together as we liked. This meant that we met at dawn only to
separate at nightfall, for, having little or no artificial light, we
went to rest with the sun, or shortly after it. Sweet, indeed, was that
companionship of perfect trust and love; so sweet, that even after all
these years I do not care to dwell upon the holy memory of those
blessed months.

So soon as the surviving Boers began to recover by the help of my
stores and medicines and the meat which I shot in plenty, of course
great discussions arose as to our future plans. First it was suggested
that we should trek to Lorenzo Marquez, and wait for a ship there to
take us down to Natal, for none of them would hear of returning
beggared to the Cape to tell the story of their failure and dreadful
bereavements. I pointed out, however, that no ship might come for a
long while, perhaps for one or two years, and that Lorenzo Marquez and
its neighborhood seemed to be a poisonous place to live in!

The next idea was that we should stop where we were, one which I rather
welcomed, as I should have been glad to abide in peace with Marie until
the six months of probation had gone by.

However, in the end this was rejected for many good reasons. Thus half
a score of white people, of whom four were members of a single family,
were certainly not strong enough to form a settlement, especially as
the surrounding natives might become actively hostile at any moment.
Again, the worst fever season was approaching, in which we should very
possibly all be carried off. Further, we had no breeding cattle or
horses, which would not live in this veld, and only the ammunition and
goods that I had brought with me.

So it was clear that but one thing remained to be done, namely, to trek
back to what is now the Transvaal territory, or, better still, to
Natal, for this route would enable us to avoid the worst of the
mountains. There we might join some other party of the emigrant
Boers—for choice, that of Retief, of whose arrival over the Drakensberg
I was able to tell them.

That point settled, we made our preparations. To begin with, I had only
enough oxen for two wagons, whereas, even if we abandoned the rest of
them, we must take at least four. Therefore, through my Kaffirs, I
opened negotiations with the surrounding natives, who, when they heard
that I was not a Boer and was prepared to pay for what I bought, soon
expressed a willingness to trade. Indeed, very shortly we had quite a
market established, to which cattle were brought that I bargained for
and purchased, giving cloth, knives, hoes, and the usual Kaffir goods
in payment for the same.

Also, they brought mealies and other corn; and oh! the delight with
which those poor people, who for months and months had existed upon
nothing but flesh-meat, ate of this farinaceous food. Never shall I
forget seeing Marie and the surviving children partake of their first
meal of porridge, and washing the sticky stuff down with draughts of
fresh, sugared milk, for with the oxen I had succeeded in obtaining two
good cows. It is enough to say that this change of diet soon completely
re-established their health, and made Marie more beautiful than she had
ever been before.

Having got the oxen, the next thing was to break them to the yoke; for,
although docile creatures enough, they had never even seen a wagon.
This proved a long and difficult process, involving many trial trips;
moreover, the selected wagons, one of which had belonged to Pereira,
must be mended with very insufficient tools and without the help of a
forge. Indeed, had it not chanced that Hans, the Hottentot, had worked
for a wagon-maker at some indefinite period of his career, I do not
think that we could have managed the job at all.

It was while we were busy with these tasks that some news arrived which
was unpleasing enough to everyone, except perhaps to Henri Marais. I
was engaged on a certain evening in trying to make sixteen of the
Kaffir cattle pull together in the yoke, instead of tying themselves
into a double knot and over-setting the wagon, when Hans, who was
helping me, suddenly called out:

“Look! baas, here comes one of my brothers,” or, in other words, a
Hottentot.

Following the line of his hand, I saw a thin and wretched creature,
clad only in some rags and the remains of a big hat with the crown out,
staggering towards us between the trees.

“Why!” exclaimed Marie in a startled voice, for, as usual, she was at
my side, “it is Klaus, one of my cousin Hernan’s after-riders.”

“So long as it is not your cousin Hernan himself, I do not care,” I
said.

Presently the poor, starved “Totty” arrived, and throwing himself down,
begged for food. A cold shoulder of buck was given to him, which he
devoured, holding it in both hands and tearing off great lumps of flesh
with his teeth like a wild beast.

When at last he was satisfied, Marais, who had come up with the other
Boers, asked him whence he came and what was his news of his master.

“Out of the bush,” he answered, “and my news of the baas is that he is
dead. At least, I left him so ill that I suppose he must be dead by
now.”

“Why did you leave him if he was ill?” asked Marais.

“Because he told me to, baas, that I might find help, for we were
starving, having fired our last bullet.”

“Is he alone, then?”

“Yes, yes, except for the wild beasts and the vultures. A lion ate the
other man, his servant, a long while ago.”

“How far is he off?” asked Marais again.

“Oh, baas, about five hours’ journey on horseback on a good road.”
(This would be some thirty-five miles.)

Then he told this story: Pereira with his two Hottentot servants, he
mounted and they on foot, had traversed about a hundred miles of rough
country in safety, when at night a lion killed and carried off one of
the Hottentots, and frightened away the horse, which was never seen
again. Pereira and Klaus proceeded on foot till they came to a great
river, on the banks of which they met some Kaffirs, who appear to have
been Zulus on outpost duty. These men demanded their guns and
ammunition to take to their king, and, on Pereira refusing to give them
up, said that they would kill them both in the morning after they had
made him instruct them in the use of the guns by beating him with
sticks.

In the night a storm came on, under cover of which Pereira and Klaus
escaped. As they dared not go forward for fear lest they should fall
into the hands of the Zulus, they fled back northwards, running all
night, only to find in the morning that they had lost their way in the
bush. This had happened nearly a month before—or, at any rate, Klaus
thought so, for no doubt the days went very slowly—during which time
they had wandered about, trying to shape some sort of course by the sun
with the object of returning to the camp. They met no man, black or
white, and supported themselves upon game, which they shot and ate raw
or sun-dried, till at length all their powder was done and they threw
away their heavy _roers_, which they could no longer carry.

It was at this juncture that from the top of a tall tree Klaus saw a
certain _koppie_ a long way off, which he recognised as being within
fifteen miles or so of Marais’s camp. By now they were starving, only
Klaus was the stronger of the two, for he found and devoured some
carrion, a dead hyena I think it was. Pereira also tried to eat this
horrible food, but, not having the stomach of a Hottentot, the first
mouthful of it made him dreadfully ill. They sought shelter in a cave
on the bank of a stream, where grew water-cresses and other herbs, such
as wild asparagus. Here it was that Pereira told Klaus to try to make
his way back to the camp, and, should he find anyone alive there, to
bring him succour.

So Klaus went, taking the remaining leg of the hyena with him, and on
the afternoon of the second day arrived as has been told.




CHAPTER X.
VROUW PRINSLOO SPEAKS HER MIND


Now, when the Hottentot’s story was finished a discussion arose. Marais
said that someone must go to see whether his nephew still lived, to
which the other Boers replied “_Ja_” in an indifferent voice. Then the
Vrouw Prinsloo took up her parable.

She remarked, as she had done before, that in her judgment Hernan
Pereira was “a stinkcat and a sneak,” who had tried to desert them in
their trouble, and by the judgment of a just God had got into trouble
himself. Personally, she wished that the lion had taken him instead of
the worthy Hottentot, although it gave her a higher opinion of lions to
conclude that it had not done so, because if it did it thought it would
have been poisoned. Well, her view was that it would be just as well to
let that traitor lie upon the bed which he had made. Moreover,
doubtless by now he was dead, so what was the good of bothering about
him?

These sentiments appeared to appeal to the Boers, for they remarked:
“_Ja_, what is the good?”

“Is it right,” asked Marais, “to abandon a comrade in misfortune, one
of our own blood?”

“_Mein Gott!_” replied Vrouw Prinsloo; “he is no blood of mine, the
evil-odoured Portuguee. But I admit he is of yours, Heer Marais, being
your sister’s son, so it is evident that you should be the one to go to
seek after him.”

“That seems to be so, Vrouw Prinsloo,” said Marais in his meditative
manner; “yet I must remember that I have Marie to look after.”

“Ach! and so had he, too, until he remembered his own skin, and went
off with the only horse and all the powder, leaving her and the rest of
us to starve. Well, you won’t go, and Prinsloo won’t go, nor my boy
either, for I’ll see to that; so Meyer must go.”

“_Nein, nein_, good vrouw,” answered Meyer, “I have those children that
are left to me to consider.”

“Then,” exclaimed Vrouw Prinsloo triumphantly, “nobody will go, so let
us forget this stinkcat, as he forgot us.”

“Does it seem right,” asked Marais again, “that a Christian man should
be left to starve in the wilderness?” and he looked at me.

“Tell me, Heer Marais,” I remarked, answering the look, “why should I
of all people go to look for the Heer Pereira, one who has not dealt
too well with me?”

“I do not know, Allan. Yet the Book tells us to turn the other cheek
and to forget injuries. Still, it is for you to judge, remembering that
we must answer for all things at the last day, and not for me. I only
know that were I your age and not burdened with a daughter to watch
over, _I_ should go.”

“Why should you talk to me thus?” I asked with indignation. “Why do you
not go yourself, seeing that I am quite ready to look after Marie?”
(Here the Vrouw Prinsloo and the other Boers tittered.) “And why do you
not address your remarks to these other _heeren_ instead of to me,
seeing that they are the friends and trek-companions of your nephew?”

At this point the male Prinsloos and Meyer found that they had business
elsewhere.

“It is for you to judge, yet remember, Allan, that it is an awful thing
to appear before our Maker with the blood of a fellow creature upon our
hands. But if you and these other hard-hearted men will not go, I at my
age, and weak as I am with all that I have suffered, will go myself.”

“Good,” said Vrouw Prinsloo; “that is the best way out of it. You will
soon get sick of the journey, Heer Marais, and we shall see no more of
the stinkcat.”

Marais rose in a resigned fashion, for he never deigned to argue with
Vrouw Prinsloo, who was too many for him, and said:

“Farewell, Marie. If I do not return, you will remember my wishes, and
my will may be found between the first leaves of our Holy Book. Get up,
Klaus, and guide me to your master,” and he administered a somewhat
vicious kick to the gorged and prostrate Hottentot.

Now Marie, who all this while had stood silent, touched me on the
shoulder and said:

“Allan, is it well that my father should go alone? Will you not
accompany him?”

“Of course,” I answered cheerfully; “on such a business there should be
two, and some Kaffirs also to carry the man, if he still lives.”

Now for the end of the story. As the Hottentot Klaus was too exhausted
to move that night, it was arranged that we should start at dawn.
Accordingly, I rose before the light, and was just finishing my
breakfast when Marie appeared at the wagon in which I slept. I got up
to greet her, and, there being no one in sight, we kissed each other
several times.

“Have done, my heart,” she said, pushing me away. “I come to you from
my father, who is sick in his stomach and would see you.”

“Which means that I shall have to go after your cousin alone,” I
replied with indignant emphasis.

She shook her head, and led me to the little shanty in which she slept.
Here by the growing light, that entered through the doorway for it had
no window, I perceived Marais seated upon a wooden stool with his hands
pressed on his middle and groaning.

“Good morning, Allan,” he said in a melancholy voice; “I am ill, very
ill, something that I have eaten perhaps, or a chill in the stomach,
such as often precedes fever or dysentery.”

“Perhaps you will get better as you walk, mynheer,” I suggested, for,
to tell the truth, I misdoubted me of this chill, and knew that he had
eaten nothing but what was quite wholesome.

“Walk! God alone knows how I can walk with something gripping my inside
like a wagon-maker’s vice. Yet I will try, for it is impossible to
leave that poor Hernan to die alone; and if I do not go to seek him, it
seems that no one else will.”

“Why should not some of my Kaffirs go with Klaus?” I asked.

“Allan,” he replied solemnly, “if you were dying in a cave far from
help, would you think well of those who sent raw Kaffirs to succour you
when they might have come themselves, Kaffirs who certainly would let
you die and return with some false story?”

“I don’t know what I should think, Heer Marais. But I do know that if
_I_ were in that cave and Pereira were in this camp, neither would he
come himself, nor so much as send a savage to save _me_.”

“It may be so, Allan. But even if another’s heart is black, should
yours be black also? Oh! I will come, though it be to my death,” and,
rising from the stool with the most dreadful groan, he began to divest
himself of the tattered blanket in which he was wrapped up.

“Oh! Allan, my father must not go; it will kill him,” exclaimed Marie,
who took a more serious view of his case than I did.

“Very well, if you think so,” I answered. “And now, as it is time for
me to be starting, good-bye.”

“You have a good heart, Allan,” said Marais, sinking back upon his
stool and resuming his blanket, while Marie looked despairingly first
at one and then at the other of us.

Half an hour later I was on the road in the very worst of tempers.

“Mind what you are about,” called Vrouw Prinsloo after me. “It is not
lucky to save an enemy, and if I know anything of that stinkcat, he
will bite your finger badly by way of gratitude. Bah! lad, if I were
you I should just camp for a few days in the bush, and then come back
and say that I could find nothing of Pereira except the dead hyenas
that had been poisoned by eating him. Good luck to you all the same,
Allan; may I find such a friend in need. It seems to me that you were
born to help others.”

Beside the Hottentot Klaus, my companions on this unwelcome journey
were three of the Zulu Kaffirs, for Hans I was obliged to leave in
charge of my cattle and goods with the other men. Also, I took a
pack-ox, an active beast that I had been training to carry loads and,
if necessary a man, although as yet it was not very well broken.

All that day we marched over extremely rough country, till at last
darkness found us in a mountainous kloof, where we slept, surrounded by
watch-fires because of the lions. Next morning at the first light we
moved on again, and about ten o’clock waded through a stream to a
little natural cave, where Klaus said he had left his master. This cave
seemed extremely silent, and, as I hesitated for a moment at its mouth,
the thought crossed my mind that if Pereira were still there, he must
be dead. Indeed, do what I would to suppress it, with that reflection
came a certain feeling of relief and even of pleasure. For well I knew
that Pereira alive was more dangerous to me than all the wild men and
beasts in Africa put together. Thrusting back this unworthy sentiment
as best I could, I entered the cave alone, for the natives, who dread
the defilement of the touch of a corpse, lingered outside.

It was but a shallow cavity washed out of the overhanging rock by the
action of water; and as soon as my eyes grew accustomed to its gloom, I
saw that at the end of it lay a man. So still did he lie, that now I
was almost certain that his troubles were over. I went up to him and
touched his face, which was cold and clammy, and then, quite convinced,
turned to leave the place, which, I thought, if a few rocks were piled
in the mouth of it, would make an excellent sepulchre.

Just as I stepped out into the sunlight, and was about to call to the
men to collect the rocks, however, I thought that I heard a very faint
groan behind me, which at the moment I set down to imagination. Still,
I returned, though I did not much like the job, knelt down by the
figure, and waited with my hand over its heart. For five minutes or
more I stayed here, and then, quite convinced, was about to leave again
when, for the second time, I heard that faint groan. Pereira was not
dead, but only on the extreme brink of death!

I ran to the entrance of the cave, calling the Kaffirs, and together we
carried him out into the sunlight. He was an awful spectacle, mere bone
with yellow skin stretched over it, and covered with filth and clotted
blood from some hurt. I had brandy with me, of which I poured a little
down his throat, whereon his heart began to beat feebly. Then we made
some soup, and poured that down his throat with more brandy, and the
end of it was he came to life again.

For three days did I doctor that man, and really I believe that if at
any time during those days I had relaxed my attentions even for a
couple of hours, he would have slipped through my fingers, for at this
business Klaus and the Kaffirs were no good at all. But I pulled him
round, and on the third morning he came to his senses. For a long while
he stared at me, for I had laid him in the mouth of the cave, where the
light was good, although the overhanging rocks protected him from the
sun. Then he said:

“Allemachte! you remind me of someone, young man. I know. It is of that
damned English boy who beat me at the goose shooting, and made me
quarrel with _Oom_ [uncle] Retief, the jackanapes that Marie was so
fond of. Well, whoever you are, you can’t be he, thank God.”

“You are mistaken, Heer Pereira,” I answered. “I am that same damned
young English jackanapes, Allan Quatermain by name, who beat you at
shooting. But if you take my advice, you will thank God for something
else, namely, that your life has been saved.”

“Who saved it?” he asked.

“If you want to know, I did; I have been nursing you these three days.”

“You, Allan Quatermain! Now, that is strange, for certainly I would not
have saved yours,” and he laughed a little, then turned over and went
to sleep.

From that time forward his recovery was rapid, and two days later we
began our journey back to Marais’s camp, the convalescent Pereira being
carried in a litter by the four natives. It was a task at which they
grumbled a good deal, for the load was heavy over rough ground, and
whenever they stumbled or shook him he cursed at them. So much did he
curse, indeed, that at length one of the Zulus, a man with a rough
temper, said that if it were not for the Inkoos, meaning myself, he
would put his assegai through him, and let the vultures carry him.
After this Pereira grew much more polite. When the bearers became
exhausted we set him on the pack-ox, which two of us led, while the
other two supported him on either side. It was in this fashion that at
last we arrived at the camp one evening.

Here the Vrouw Prinsloo was the first to greet us. We found her
standing in the game path which we were following, quite a quarter of a
mile from the wagons, with her hands set upon her broad hips and her
feet apart. Her attitude was so defiant, and had about it such an air
of premeditation, that I cannot help thinking she had got wind of our
return, perhaps from having seen the smoke of our last fires, and was
watching for us. Also, her greeting was warm.

“Ah! here you come, Hernan Pereira,” she cried, “riding on an ox, while
better men walk. Well, now, I want a chat with you. How came it that
you went off in the night, taking the only horse and all the powder?”

“I went to get help for you,” he replied sulkily.

“Did you, did you, indeed! Well, it seems that it was you who wanted
the help, after all. What do you mean to pay the Heer Allan Quatermain
for saving your life, for I am sure he has done so? You have got no
goods left, although you were always boasting about your riches; they
are now at the bottom of a river, so it will have to be in love and
service.”

He muttered something about my wanting no payment for a Christian act.

“No, he wants no payment, Hernan Pereira, he is one of the true sort,
but you’ll pay him all the same and in bad coin if you get the chance.
Oh! I have come out to tell you what I think of you. You are a
stinkcat; do you hear that? A thing that no dog would bite if he could
help it! You are a traitor also. You brought us to this cursed country,
where you said your relatives would give us wealth and land, and then,
after famine and fever attacked us, you rode away, and left us to die
to save your own dirty skin. And now you come back here for help, saved
by him whom you cheated in the Goose Kloof, by him whose true love you
have tried to steal. Oh, _mein Gott!_ why does the Almighty leave such
fellows alive, while so many that are good and honest and innocent lie
beneath the soil because of stinkcats like you?”

So she went on, striding at the side of the pack-ox, and reviling
Pereira in a ceaseless stream of language, until at length he thrust
his thumbs into his ears and glared at her in speechless wrath.

Thus it was that at last we arrived in the camp, where, having seen us
coming, all the Boers were gathered. They are not a particularly
humorous people, but this spectacle of the advance of Pereira seated on
the pack-ox, a steed that is becoming to few riders, with the furious
and portly Vrouw Prinsloo striding at his side and shrieking abuse at
him, caused them to burst into laughter. Then Pereira’s temper gave
out, and he became even more abusive than Vrouw Prinsloo.

“Is this the way you receive me, you veld-hogs, you common Boers, who
are not fit to mix with a man of position and learning like myself?” he
began.

“Then in God’s name why do you mix with us, Hernan Pereira?” asked the
saturnine Meyer, thrusting his face forward till the Newgate fringe he
wore by way of a beard literally seemed to curl with wrath. “When we
were hungry you did not wish it, for you slunk away and left us, taking
all the powder. But now that we are full again, thanks to the little
Englishman, and you are hungry, you come back. Well, if I had my way I
would give you a gun and six days’ rations, and turn you out to shift
for yourself.”

“Don’t be afraid, Jan Meyer,” shouted Pereira from the back of the
pack-ox. “As soon as I am strong enough I will leave you in charge of
your English captain here”—and he pointed to me—“and go to tell our
people what sort of folk you are.”

“That is good news,” interrupted Prinsloo, a stolid old Boer, who stood
by puffing at his pipe. “Get well, get well as soon as you can, Hernan
Pereira.”

It was at this juncture that Marais arrived, accompanied by Marie.
Where he came from I do not know, but I think he must have been keeping
in the background on purpose to see what kind of a reception Pereira
would meet with.

“Silence, brothers,” he said. “Is this the way you greet my nephew, who
has returned from the gate of death, when you should be on your knees
thanking God for his deliverance?”

“Then go on your knees and thank Him yourself, Henri Marais,” screamed
the irrepressible Vrouw Prinsloo. “I give thanks for the safe return of
Allan here, though it is true they would be warmer if he had left this
stinkcat behind him. Allemachte! Henri Marais, why do you make so much
of this Portuguese fellow? Has he bewitched you? Or is it because he is
your sister’s son, or because you want to force Marie there to marry
him? Or is it, perhaps, that he knows of something bad in your past
life, and you have to bribe him to keep his mouth shut?”

Now, whether this last unpleasant suggestion was a mere random arrow
drawn from Vrouw Prinsloo’s well-stored quiver, or whether the vrouw
had got hold of the tail-end of some long-buried truth, I do not know.
Of course, however, the latter explanation is possible. Many men have
done things in their youth which they do not wish to see dug up in
their age; and Pereira may have learned a family secret of the kind
from his mother.

At any rate, the effect of the old lady’s words upon Marais was quite
remarkable. Suddenly he went into one of his violent and constitutional
rages. He cursed Vrouw Prinsloo. He cursed everybody else, assuring
them severally and collectively that Heaven would come even with them.
He said there was a plot against him and his nephew, and that I was at
the bottom of it, I who had made his daughter fond of my ugly little
face. So furious were his words, whereof there were many more which I
have forgotten, that at length Marie began to cry and ran away.
Presently, too, the Boers strolled off, shrugging their shoulders, one
of them saying audibly that Marais had gone quite mad at last, as he
always thought he would.

Then Marais followed them, throwing up his arms and still cursing as he
went, and, slipping over the tail of the pack-ox, Pereira followed him.
So the Vrouw Prinsloo and I were left alone, for the coloured men had
departed, as they always do when white people begin to quarrel.

“There, Allan, my boy,” said the vrouw in triumph, “I have found the
sore place on the mule’s back, and didn’t I make him squeal and kick,
although on most days of the week he seems to be such a good and quiet
mule—at any rate, of late.”

“I dare say you did, vrouw,” I said wrathfully, “but I wish you would
leave Mynheer Marais’s sore places alone, seeing that if the squeals
are for you, the kicks are for me.”

“What does that matter, Allan?” she asked. “He always was your enemy,
so that it is just as well you should see his heels when you are out of
reach of them. My poor boy, I think you will have a bad time of it
between the stinkcat and the mule, although you have done so much for
both of them. Well, there is one thing—Marie has a true heart. She will
never marry any man except yourself, Allan—even if you are not here to
marry,” she added by an afterthought.

The old lady paused a little, staring at the ground. Then she looked up
and said:

“Allan, my dear” (for she was really fond of me, and called me thus at
times), “you didn’t take the advice I gave you, namely, to look for
Pereira and not to find him. Well, I will give you some more, which you
_will_ take if you are wise.”

“What is it?” I asked doubtfully; for, although she was upright enough
in her own way, the Vrouw Prinsloo could bring herself to look at
things in strange lights. Like many other women, she judged of moral
codes by the impulses of her heart, and was quite prepared to stretch
them to suit circumstances or to gain an end which she considered good
in itself.

“Just this, lad. Do you make a two days’ march with Marie into the
bush. I want a little change, so I will come, too, and marry you there;
for I have got a prayer-book, and can spell out the service if we go
through it once or twice first.”

Now, the vision of Marie and myself being married by the Vrouw Prinsloo
in the vast and untrodden veld, although attractive, was so absurd that
I laughed.

“Why do you laugh, Allan? Anyone can marry people if there is no one
else there; indeed, I believe that they can marry themselves.”

“I dare say,” I answered, not wishing to enter into a legal argument
with the vrouw. “But you see, Tante, I solemnly promised her father
that I would not marry her until she was of age, and if I broke my word
I should not be an honest man.”

“An honest man!” she exclaimed with the utmost contempt; “an honest
man! Well, are Marais and Hernan Pereira honest men? Why do you not cut
your stick the same length as theirs, Allan Quatermain? I tell you that
your _verdomde_ honesty will be your ruin. You remember my words later
on,” and she marched off in high dudgeon.

When she had gone I went to my wagons, where Hans was waiting for me
with a detailed and interminable report of everything that had happened
in my absence. Glad was I to find that, except for the death of one
sickly ox, nothing had gone wrong. When at length he had ended his long
story, I ate some food which Marie sent over for me ready cooked, for I
was too tired to join any of the Boers that night. Just as I had
finished my meal and was thinking of turning in, Marie herself appeared
within the circle of the camp-fire’s light. I sprang up and ran to her,
saying that I had not expected to see her that evening, and did not
like to come to the house.

“No,” she answered, drawing me back into the shadows, “I understand. My
father seems very much upset, almost mad, indeed. If the Vrouw
Prinsloo’s tongue had been a snake’s fang, it could not have stung him
worse.”

“And where is Pereira?” I asked.

“Oh! my cousin sleeps in the other room. He is weak and worn out. All
the same, Allan, he wanted to kiss me. So I told him at once how
matters stood between you and me, and that we were to be married in six
months.”

“What did he say to that?” I asked.

“He turned to my father and said: ‘Is this true, my uncle?’ And my
father answered: ‘Yes, that is the best bargain I could make with the
Englishman, seeing that you were not here to make a better.’”

“And what happened then, Marie?”

“Oh, then Hernan thought a while. At last he looked up and said: ‘I
understand. Things have gone badly. I acted for the best, who went away
to try to find help for all of you. I failed. Meanwhile the Englishman
came and saved you. Afterwards he saved me also. Uncle, in all this I
see God’s hand; had it not been for this Allan none of us would be
alive. Yes, God used him that we might be kept alive. Well, he has
promised that he will not marry Marie for six months. And you know, my
uncle, that some of these English are great fools; they keep their
promises even to their own loss. Now, in six months much may happen;
who knows what will happen?’”

“Were you present when you heard all this, Marie?” I asked.

“No, Allan; I was the other side of the reed partition. But at those
words I entered and said: ‘My father and Cousin Hernan, please
understand that there is one thing which will never happen.’

“‘What is that?’ asked my cousin.

“‘It will never happen that I shall marry you, Hernan,’ I replied.

“‘Who knows, Marie, who knows?’ he said.

“‘I do, Hernan,’ I answered. ‘Even if Allan were to die to-morrow, I
would not marry you, either then or twenty years hence. I am glad that
he has saved your life, but henceforth we are cousins, nothing more.’

“‘You hear what the girl tells us,’ said my father; ‘why do you not
give up the business? What is the use of kicking against the pricks?’

“‘If one wears stout boots and kicks hard enough, the pricks give way,’
said Hernan. ‘Six months is a long time, my uncle.’

“‘It may be so, cousin,’ I said; ‘but remember that neither six months
nor six years, nor six thousand years, are long enough to make me marry
any man except Allan Quatermain, who has just rescued you from death.
Do you understand?’

“‘Yes,’ he replied, ‘I understand that you will not marry me. Only then
I promise that you shall not marry either Allan Quatermain or any other
man.’

“‘God will decide that,’ I answered, and came away, leaving him and my
father together. And now, Allan, tell me all that has happened since we
parted.”

So I told her everything, including the Vrouw Prinsloo’s advice.

“Of course, Allan, you were quite right,” she remarked when I had
finished; “but I am not sure that the Vrouw Prinsloo was not also right
in her own fashion. I am afraid of my cousin Hernan, who holds my
father in his hand—fast, fast. Still, we have promised, and must keep
our word.”




CHAPTER XI.
THE SHOT IN THE KLOOF


I think it was about three weeks after these events that we began our
southward trek. On the morning subsequent to our arrival at Marais’s
camp, Pereira came up to me when several people were present, and,
taking my hand, thanked me in a loud voice for having saved his life.
Thenceforward, he declared, I should be dearer to him than a brother,
for was there not a blood bond between us?

I answered I did not think any such bond existed; indeed, I was not
sure what it meant. I had done my duty by him, neither less nor more,
and there was nothing further to be said.

It turned out, however, that there was a great deal further to be said,
since Pereira desired to borrow money, or, rather, goods, from me. He
explained that owing to the prejudices of the vulgar Boers who remained
alive in that camp, and especially of the scandalous-tongued Vrouw
Prinsloo, both he and his uncle had come to the conclusion that it
would be wise for him to remove himself as soon as possible. Therefore
he proposed to trek away alone.

I answered that I should have thought he had done enough solitary
travelling in this veld, seeing how his last expedition had ended. He
replied that he had, indeed, but everyone here was so bitter against
him that no choice was left. Then he added with an outburst of truth:

“Allemachte! Mynheer Quatermain, do you suppose that it is pleasant for
me to see you making love all day to the maid who was my betrothed, and
to see her paying back the love with her eyes? Yes, and doubtless with
her lips, too, from all I hear.”

“You could leave her whom you called your betrothed, but who never was
betrothed to anyone but me with her own will, to starve in the veld,
mynheer. Why, then, should you be angry because I picked up that which
you threw away, that, too, which was always my own and not yours? Had
it not been for me, there would now be no maid left for us to quarrel
over, as, had it not been for me, there would be no man left for me to
quarrel with about the maid.”

“Are you God, then, Englishman, that you dispose of the lives of men
and women at your will? It was He Who saved us, not you.”

“He may have saved you, but it was through me. I carried out the rescue
of these poor people whom you deserted, and I nursed you back to life.”

“I did not desert them; I went to get help for them.”

“Taking all the powder and the only horse with you! Well, that is done
with, and now you want to borrow goods to pay for cattle—from me, whom
you hate. You are not proud, Mynheer Pereira, when you have an end to
serve, whatever that end may be,” and I looked at him. My instinct
warned me against this false and treacherous man, who, I felt, was even
then plotting in his heart to bring some evil upon me.

“No, I am not proud. Why should I be, seeing that I mean to repay you
twice over for anything which you may lend me now?”

I reflected a while. Certainly our journey to Natal would be pleasanter
if Pereira were not of the company. Also, if he went with us, I was
sure that before we came to the end of that trek, one or other of us
would leave his bones on the road. In short, not to put too fine a
point on it, I feared lest in this way or in that he would bring me to
my death in order that he might possess himself of Marie. We were in a
wild country, with few witnesses and no law courts, where such deeds
might be done again and again and the doer never called to account for
lack of evidence and judges.

So I made up my mind to fall in with his wishes, and we began to
bargain. The end of it was that I advanced him enough of my remaining
goods to buy the cattle he required from the surrounding natives. It
was no great quantity, after all, seeing that in this uncivilised place
an ox could be purchased for a few strings of beads or a cheap knife.
Further, I sold him a few of the beasts that I had broken, a gun, some
ammunition and certain other necessaries, for all of which things he
gave me a note of hand written in my pocket-book. Indeed, I did more;
for as none of the Boers would help him I assisted Pereira to break in
the cattle he bought, and even consented when he asked me to give him
the services of two of the Zulus whom I had hired.

All these preparations took a long while. If I remember right, twelve
more days had gone by before Pereira finally trekked off from Marais’s
camp, by which time he was quite well and strong again.

We all assembled to see the start, and Marais offered up a prayer for
his nephew’s safe journey and our happy meeting again in Natal at the
laager of Retief, which was to be our rendezvous, if that leader were
still in Natal. No one else joined in the prayer. Only Vrouw Prinsloo
audibly added another of her own. It was to the effect that he might
not come back a second time, and that she might never see his face
again, either at Retief’s laager or anywhere else, if it would please
the good Lord so to arrange matters.

The Boers tittered; even the Meyer children tittered, for by this time
the hatred of the Vrouw Prinsloo for Hernan Pereira was the joke of the
place. But Pereira himself pretended not to hear, said good-bye to us
all affectionately, adding a special petition for the Vrouw Prinsloo,
and off we went.

I say “we went” because with my usual luck, to help him with the
half-broken oxen, I was commandeered to accompany this man to his first
outspan, a place with good water about twelve miles from the camp,
where he proposed to remain for the night.

Now, as we started about ten o’clock in the morning and the veld was
fairly level, I expected that we should reach this outspan by three or
four in the afternoon, which would give me time to walk back before
sunset. In fact, however, so many accidents happened of one sort or
another, both to the wagon itself, of which the woodwork had shrunk
with long standing in the sun, and to the cattle, which, being unused
to the yoke, tied themselves in a double knot upon every opportunity,
that we only arrived there at the approach of night.

The last mile of that trek was through a narrow gorge cut out by water
in the native rock. Here trees grew sparsely, also great ferns, but the
bottom of the gorge, along which game were accustomed to travel, was
smooth enough for wagons, save for a few fallen boulders, which it was
necessary to avoid.

When at length we reached the outspan I asked the Hottentot, Klaus, who
was assisting me to drive the team, where his master was, for I could
not see him anywhere. He answered that he had gone back down the kloof
to look for something that had fallen from the wagon, a bolt I think he
said.

“Very good,” I replied. “Then tell him, if we do not meet, that I have
returned to the camp.”

As I set out the sun was sinking below the horizon, but this did not
trouble me overmuch, as I had a rifle with me, that same light rifle
with which I had shot the geese in the great match. Also I knew that
the moon, being full, would be up presently.

The sun sank, and the kloof was plunged in gloom. The place seemed
eerie and lonesome, and suddenly I grew afraid. I began to wonder where
Pereira was, and what he might be doing. I even thought of turning back
and finding some way round, only having explored all this district
pretty thoroughly in my various shooting expeditions from the camp, I
knew there was no practicable path across those hills. So I went on
with my rifle at full cock, whistling to keep up my courage, which, of
course, in the circumstances was a foolish thing to do. It occurred to
me at the time that it was foolish, but, in truth, I would not give way
to the dark suspicions which crossed my mind. Doubtless by now Pereira
had passed me and reached the outspan.

The moon began to shine—that wonderful African moon, which turns night
to day—throwing a network of long, black shadows of trees and rocks
across the game track I was following. Right ahead of me was a
particularly dark patch of this shadow, caused by a projecting wall of
cliff, and beyond it an equally bright patch of moonlight. Somehow I
misdoubted me of that stretch of gloom, for although, of course, I
could see nothing there, my quick ear caught the sound of movements.

I halted for a moment. Then, reflecting that these were doubtless
caused by some night-walking creature, which, even should it chance to
be dangerous, would flee at the approach of man, I plunged into it
boldly. As I emerged at the other end—the shadow was eighteen or twenty
paces long—it occurred to me that if any enemy were lurking there, I
should be an easy target as I entered the line of clear light. So,
almost instinctively, for I do not remember that I reasoned the thing
out, after my first two steps forward in the light I gave a little
spring to the left, where there was still shadow, although it was not
deep. Well was it for me that I did so, for at that moment I felt
something touch my cheek and heard the loud report of a gun immediately
behind me.

Now, the wisest course would have been for me to run before whoever had
fired found time to reload. But a kind of fury seized me, and run I
would not. On the contrary, I turned with a shout, and charged back
into the shadow. Something heard me coming, something fled in front of
me. In a few seconds we were out into the moonlight beyond, and, as I
expected, I saw that this something was a man—Pereira!

He halted and wheeled round, lifting the stock of his gun, club
fashion.

“Thank God! it is you, Heer Allan,” he said; “I thought you were a
tiger.”

“Then it is your last thought, murderer,” I answered, raising my rifle.

“Don’t shoot,” he said. “Would you have my blood upon you? Why do you
want to kill me?”

“Why did you try to kill me?” I answered, covering him.

“I try to kill you! Are you mad? Listen, for your own sake. I sat down
on the bank yonder waiting for the moon, and, being tired, fell asleep.
Then I woke up with a start, and, thinking from the sounds that a tiger
was after me, fired to scare it. Allemachte! man, if I had aimed at
you, could I have missed at that distance?”

“You did not quite miss, and had I not stepped to the left, you would
have blown my head off. Say your prayers, you dog!”

“Allan Quatermain,” he exclaimed with desperate energy, “you think I
lie, who speak the truth. Kill me if you will, only then remember that
you will hang for it. We court one woman, that is known, and who will
believe this story of yours that I tried to shoot you? Soon the Kaffirs
will come to look for me, probably they are starting already, and will
find my body with your bullet in my heart. Then they will take it back
to Marais’s camp, and I say—who will believe your story?”

“Some, I think, murderer,” but as I spoke the words a chill of fear
struck me. It was true, I could prove nothing, having no witnesses, and
henceforward I should be a Cain among the Boers, one who had slain a
man for jealousy. His gun was empty; yes, but it might be said that I
had fired it after his death. And as for the graze upon my cheek—why, a
twig might have caused it. What should I do, then? Drive him before me
to the camp, and tell this tale? Even then it would be but my word
against his. No, he had me in a forked stick. I must let him go, and
trust that Heaven would avenge his crime, since I could not. Moreover,
by now my first rage was cooling, and to execute a man thus—

“Hernan Pereira,” I said, “you are a liar and a coward. You tried to
butcher me because Marie loves me and hates you, and you want to force
her to marry you. Yet I cannot shoot you down in cold blood as you
deserve. I leave it to God to punish you, as, soon or late, He will,
here or hereafter; you who thought to slaughter me and trust to the
hyenas to hide your crime, as they would have done before morning. Get
you gone before I change my mind, and be swift.”

Without another word he turned and ran swiftly as a buck, leaping from
side to side as he ran, to disturb my aim in case I should shoot.

When he was a hundred yards away or more I, too, turned and ran, never
feeling safe till I knew there was a mile of ground between us.

It was past ten o’clock that night when I got back to the camp, where I
found Hans the Hottentot about to start to look for me, with two of the
Zulus, and told him that I had been detained by accidents to the wagon.
The Vrouw Prinsloo was still up also, waiting to hear of my arrival.

“What was the accident, Allan?” she asked. “It looks as though there
had been a bullet in it,” and she pointed to the bloody smear upon my
cheek.

I nodded.

“Pereira’s?” she asked again.

I nodded a second time.

“Did you kill him?”

“No; I let him go. It would have been said that I murdered him,” and I
told her what had happened.

“_Ja_, Allan,” she remarked when I had finished. “I think you were
wise, for you could have proved nothing. But oh! for what fate, I
wonder, is God Almighty saving up that stinkcat. Well, I will go and
tell Marie that you are back safe, for her father won’t let her out of
the hut so late; but nothing more unless you wish it.”

“No, Tante; I think nothing more, at any rate at present.”

Here I may state, however, that within a few days Marie and everyone
else in the camp knew the story in detail, except perhaps Marais, to
whom no one spoke of his nephew. Evidently Vrouw Prinsloo had found
herself unable to keep secret such an example of the villainy of her
aversion, Pereira. So she told her daughter, who told the others
quickly enough, though I gathered that some of them set down what had
happened to accident. Bad as they knew Pereira to be, they could not
believe that he was guilty of so black a crime.

About a week later the rest of us started from Marais’s camp, a place
that, notwithstanding the sadness of many of its associations, I
confess I left with some regret. The trek before us, although not so
very long, was of an extremely perilous nature. We had to pass through
about two hundred miles of country of which all we knew was that its
inhabitants were the Amatonga and other savage tribes. Here I should
explain that after much discussion we had abandoned the idea of
retracing the route followed by Marais on his ill-fated journey towards
Delagoa.

Had we taken this it would have involved our crossing the terrible
Lobombo Mountains, over which it was doubtful whether our light cattle
could drag the wagons. Moreover, the country beyond the mountains was
said to be very bare of game and also of Kaffirs, so that food might be
lacking. On the other hand, if we kept to the east of the mountains the
veld through which we must pass was thickly populated, which meant that
in all probability we could buy grain.

What finally decided us to adopt this route, however, was that here in
these warm, low-lying lands there would be grass for the oxen. Indeed,
now, at the beginning of spring, in this part of Africa it was already
pushing. Even if it were not, the beasts could live upon what herbage
remained over from last summer and on the leaves of trees, neither of
which in this winter veld ever become quite lifeless, whereas on the
sere and fire-swept plains beyond the mountains they might find nothing
at all. So we determined to risk the savages and the lions which
followed the game into these hot districts, especially as it was not
yet the fever season or that of the heavy rains, so that the rivers
would be fordable.

I do not propose to set out our adventures in detail, for these would
be too long. Until the great one of which I shall have to tell
presently, they were of an annoying rather than of a serious nature.
Travelling as we did, between the mountains and the sea, we could not
well lose our way, especially as my Zulus had passed through that
country; and when their knowledge failed us, we generally managed to
secure the services of local guides. The roads, however, or rather the
game tracks and Kaffir paths which we followed, were terrible, for with
the single exception of that of Pereira for part of the distance, no
wagon had ever gone over them before. Indeed, a little later in the
year they could not have been travelled at all. Sometimes we stuck in
bogs out of which we had to dig the wheels, and sometimes in the rocky
bottoms of streams, while once we were obliged literally to cut our way
through a belt of dense bush from which it took us eight days to
escape.

Our other chief trouble came from the lions, whereof there were great
numbers in this veld. The prevalence of these hungry beasts forced us
to watch our cattle very closely while they grazed, and at night,
wherever it was possible, to protect them and ourselves in _bomas_, or
fences of thorns, within which we lit fires to scare away wild beasts.
Notwithstanding these precautions, we lost several of the oxen, and
ourselves had some narrow escapes.

Thus, one night, just as Marie was about to enter the wagon where the
women slept, a great lion, desperate with hunger, sprang over the
fence. She leapt away from the beast, and in so doing caught her foot
and fell down, whereon the lion came for her. In another few seconds
she would have been dead, or carried off living.

But as it chanced, Vrouw Prinsloo was close at hand. Seizing a flaming
bough from the fire, that intrepid woman ran at the lion and, as it
opened its huge mouth to roar or bite, thrust the burning end of the
bough into its throat. The lion closed its jaws upon it, then finding
the mouthful not to its taste, departed even more quickly than it had
come, uttering the most dreadful noises, and leaving Marie quite
unhurt. Needless to say, after this I really worshipped the Vrouw
Prinsloo, though she, good soul, thought nothing of the business, which
in those days was but a common incident of travel.

I think it was on the day after this lion episode that we came upon
Pereira’s wagon, or rather its remains. Evidently he had tried to trek
along a steep, rocky bank which overhung a stream, with the result that
the wagon had fallen into the stream-bed, then almost dry, and been
smashed beyond repair.

The Tonga natives of the neighbourhood, who had burned most of the
woodwork in order to secure the precious iron bolts and fittings,
informed us that the white man and his servants who were with the wagon
had gone forward on foot some ten days before, driving their cattle
with them. Whether this story were true or not we had no means of
finding out. It was quite possible that Pereira and his companions had
been murdered, though as we found the Tongas very quiet folk if well
treated and given the usual complimentary presents for wayleaves, this
did not seem probable. Indeed, a week later our doubts upon this point
were cleared up thus.

We had reached a big kraal called Fokoti, on the Umkusi River, which
appeared to be almost deserted. We asked an old woman whom we met where
its people had gone. She answered that they had fled towards the
borders of Swaziland, fearing an attack from the Zulus, whose
territories began beyond this Umkusi River. It seemed that a few days
before a Zulu impi or regiment had appeared upon the banks of the
river, and although there was no war at the time between the Zulus and
the Tongas, the latter had thought it wise to put themselves out of
reach of those terrible spears.

On hearing this news we debated whether it would not be well for us to
follow their example and, trekking westwards, try to find a pass in the
mountains. Upon this point there was a division of opinion among us.
Marais, who was a fatalist, wished to go on, saying that the good Lord
would protect us, as He had done in the past.

“Allemachte!” answered the Vrouw Prinsloo. “Did He protect all those
who lie dead at Marais’s camp, whither your folly led us, mynheer? The
good Lord expects us to look after our own skins, and I know that these
Zulus are of the same blood as Umsilikazi’s Kaffirs, who have killed so
many of our people. Let us try the mountains, say I.”

Of course her husband and son agreed with her, for to them the vrouw’s
word was law; but Marais, being, as usual, obstinate, would not give
way. All that afternoon they wrangled, while I held my tongue,
declaring that I was willing to abide by the decision of the majority.
In the end, as I foresaw they would, they appealed to me to act as
umpire between them.

“Friends,” I answered, “if you had asked me my opinion before, I should
have voted for trying the mountains, beyond which, perhaps, we might
find some Boers. I do not like this story of the Zulu impi. I think
that someone has told them of our coming, and that it is us they mean
to attack and not the Tongas, with whom they are at peace. My men say
that it is not usual for impis to visit this part of the country.”

“Who could have told them?” asked Marais.

“I don’t know, mynheer. Perhaps the natives have sent on word, or
perhaps—Hernan Pereira.”

“I knew that you would suspect my nephew, Allan,” he exclaimed angrily.

“I suspect no one; I only weigh what is probable. However, it is too
late for us to move to-night either south or westwards, so I think I
will sleep over the business and see what I can find out from my
Zulus.”

That night, or rather the following morning, the question was settled
for us, for when I woke up at dawn, it was to see the faint light
glimmering on what I knew must be spears. We were surrounded by a great
company of Zulus, as I discovered afterwards, over two hundred strong.
Thinking that after their fashion they were preparing to attack us at
dawn, I called the news to the others, whereon Marais rushed forward,
just as he had left his bed, cocking his roer as he came.

“For the love of God, do not shoot!” I said. “How can we resist so
many? Soft words are our only chance.”

Still he attempted to fire, and would have done so had I not thrown
myself upon him and literally torn the gun from his hand. By this time
the Vrouw Prinsloo had come up, a very weird spectacle, I recollect, in
what she called her “sleep-garments,” that included a night-cap made of
a worn jackal skin and a kind of otter-pelt stomacher.

“Accursed fool!” she said to Marais, “would you cause all our throats
to be cut? Go forward, you, Allan, and talk to those _swartzels_” (that
is, black creatures), “gently, as you would to a savage dog. You have a
tongue steeped in oil, and they may listen to you.”

“Yes,” I answered; “that seems the best thing to do. If I should not
return, give my love to Marie.”

So I beckoned to the headman of my Zulus whom I had hired at Delagoa,
to accompany me, and marched forward boldly quite unarmed. We were
encamped upon a rise of ground a quarter of a mile from the river, and
the impi, or those of them whom we could see, were at the foot of this
rise about a hundred and sixty yards away. The light was growing now,
and when I was within fifty paces of them they saw me. At some word of
command a number of men rushed toward me, their fighting shields held
over their bodies and their spears up.

“We are dead!” exclaimed my Kaffir in a resigned voice. I shared his
opinion, but thought I might as well die standing as running away.

Now I should explain that though as yet I had never mixed with these
Zulus, I could talk several native dialects kindred to that which they
used very well indeed. Moreover, ever since I had hired men of their
race at Delagoa, I had spent all my spare time in conversing with them
and acquiring a knowledge of their language, history and customs. So by
this time I knew their tongue fairly, although occasionally I may have
used terms which were unfamiliar to them.

Thus it came about that I was able to shout to them, asking what was
their business with us. Hearing themselves addressed in words which
they understood, the men halted, and seeing that I was unarmed, three
of them approached me.

“We come to take you prisoners, white people, or to kill you if you
resist,” said their captain.

“By whose order?” I asked.

“By the order of Dingaan our king.”

“Is it so? And who told Dingaan that we were here?”

“The Boer who came in front of you.”

“Is it so?” I said again. “And now what do you need of us?”

“That you should accompany us to the kraal of Dingaan.”

“I understand. We are quite willing, since it lies upon our road. But
then why do you come against us, who are peaceful travellers, with your
spears lifted?”

“For this reason. The Boer told us that there is among you a ‘child of
George’” (an Englishman), “a terrible man who would kill us unless we
killed or bound him first. Show us this child of George that we may
make him fast, or slay him, and we will not hurt the rest of you.”

“I am the child of George,” I answered, “and if you think it necessary
to make me fast, do so.”

Now the Zulus burst out laughing.

“You! Why, you are but a boy who weighs no more than a fat girl,”
exclaimed their captain, a great, bony fellow who was named Kambula.

“That may be so,” I answered; “but sometimes the wisdom of their
fathers dwells in the young. I am the son of George who saved these
Boers from death far away, and I am taking them back to their own
people. We desire to see Dingaan, your king. Be pleased therefore to
lead us to him as he has commanded you to do. If you do not believe
what I tell you, ask this man who is with me, and his companions who
are of your own race. They will tell you everything.”

Then the captain Kambula called my servant apart and talked with him
for a long while.

When the interview was finished he advanced to me and said:

“Now I have heard all about you. I have heard that although young you
are very clever, so clever that you do not sleep, but watch by night as
well as by day. Therefore, that I, Kambula, name you Macumazahn,
Watcher-by-night, and by that name you shall henceforth be known among
us. Now, Macumazahn, son of George, bring out these Boers whom you are
guiding that I may lead them in their moving huts to the Great Place,
Umgungundhlovu, where dwells Dingaan the king. See, we lay down our
spears and will come to meet them unarmed, trusting to you to protect
us, O Macumazahn, Son of George,” and he cast his assegai to the
ground.

“Come,” I said, and led them to the wagons.




CHAPTER XII.
DINGAAN’S BET


As I advanced to the wagons accompanied by Kambula and his two
companions, I saw that Marais, in a state of great excitement, was
engaged in haranguing the two Prinsloo men and Meyer, while the Vrouw
Prinsloo and Marie appeared to be attempting to calm him.

“They are unarmed,” I heard him shout. “Let us seize the black devils
and hold them as hostages.”

Thereon, led by Marais, the three Boer men came towards us doubtfully,
their guns in their hands.

“Be careful what you are doing,” I called to them. “These are envoys,”
and they hung back a little while Marais went on with his haranguing.

The Zulus looked at them and at me, then Kambula said:

“Are you leading us into a trap, Son of George?”

“Not so,” I answered; “but the Boers are afraid of you and think to
take you prisoners.”

“Tell them,” said Kambula quietly, “that if they kill us or lay a hand
on us, as no doubt they can do, very soon every one of them will be
dead and their women with them.”

I repeated this ultimatum energetically enough, but Marais shouted:

“The Englishman is betraying us to the Zulus! Do not trust him; seize
them as I tell you.”

What would have happened I am sure I do not know; but just then the
Vrouw Prinsloo came up and caught her husband by the arm, exclaiming:

“You shall have no part in this fool’s business. If Marais wishes to
seize the Zulus, let him do so himself. Are you mad or drunk that you
should think that Allan would wish to betray Marie to the Kaffirs, to
say nothing of the rest of us?” and she began to wave an extremely
dirty _vatdoek_, or dishcloth, which she always carried about with her
and used for every purpose, towards Kambula as a sign of peace.

Now the Boers gave way, and Marais, seeing himself in a minority,
glowered at me in silence.

“Ask these white people, O Macumazahn,” said Kambula, “who is their
captain, for to the captain I would speak.”

I translated the question, and Marais answered:

“I am.”

“No,” broke in Vrouw Prinsloo, “_I_ am. Tell them, Allan, that these
men are all fools and have given the rule to me, a woman.”

So I told them. Evidently this information surprised them a little, for
they discussed together. Then Kambula said:

“So be it. We have heard that the people of George are now ruled by a
woman, and as you, Macumazahn, are one of that people, doubtless it is
the same among your party.”

Here I may add that thenceforward the Zulus always accepted the Vrouw
Prinsloo as the _Inkosikaas_ or chieftainess of our little band, and
with the single exception of myself, whom they looked upon as her
“mouth,” or _induna_, would only transact business with or give
directions to her. The other Boers they ignored completely.

This point of etiquette settled, Kambula bade me repeat what he had
already told me, that we were prisoners whom he was instructed by
Dingaan to convey to his Great Place, and that if we made no attempt to
escape we should not be hurt upon the journey.

I did so, whereon the vrouw asked as I had done, who had informed
Dingaan that we were coming.

I repeated to her word for word what the Zulus had told me, that it was
Pereira, whose object seems to have been to bring about my death or
capture.

Then the vrouw exploded.

“Do you hear that, Henri Marais?” she screamed. “It is your stinkcat of
a nephew again. Oh! I thought I smelt him! Your nephew has betrayed us
to these Zulus that he may bring Allan to his death. Ask them, Allan,
what this Dingaan has done with the stinkcat.”

So I asked, and was informed they believed that the king had let
Pereira go on to his own people in payment of the information that he
had given him.

“My God!” said the vrouw, “I hoped that he had knocked him on the head.
Well, what is to be done now?”

“I don’t know,” I answered. Then an idea occurred to me, and I said to
Kambula:

“It seems to be me, the son of George, that your king wants. Take me,
and let these people go on their road.”

The three Zulus began to discuss this point, withdrawing themselves a
little way so that I could not overhear them. But when the Boers
understood the offer that I had made, Marie, who until now had been
silent, grew more angry than ever I had seen her before.

“It shall not be!” she said, stamping her foot. “Father, I have been
obedient to you for long, but if you consent to this I will be obedient
no more. Allan saved my cousin Hernan’s life, as he saved all our
lives. In payment for that good deed Hernan tried to murder him in the
kloof—oh! be quiet, Allan; I know all the story. Now he has betrayed
him to the Zulus, telling them that he is a terrible and dangerous man
who must be killed. Well, if he is to be killed, I will be killed with
him, and if the Zulus take him and let us free, I go with him. Now make
up your mind.”

Marais tugged at his beard, staring first at his daughter and then at
me. What he would have answered I do not know, for at that moment
Kambula stepped forward and gave his decision.

It was to the effect that although it was the Son of George whom
Dingaan wanted, his orders were that all with him were to be taken
also. Those orders could not be disobeyed. The king would settle the
matter as to whether some of us were to be killed and some let free, or
if all were to be killed or let free, when we reached his House.
Therefore he commanded that “we should tie the oxen to the moving huts
and cross the river at once.”

This was the end of that scene. Having no choice we inspanned and
continued our journey, escorted by the company of two hundred savages.
I am bound to say that during the four or five days that it took us to
reach Dingaan’s kraal they behaved very well to us. With Kambula and
his officers, all of them good fellows in their way, I had many
conversations, and from them learned much as to the state and customs
of the Zulus. Also the peoples of the districts through which we passed
flocked round us at every outspan, for most of them had never seen a
white man before, and in return for a few beads brought us all the food
that we required. Indeed, the beads, or their equivalents, were nothing
but a present, since, by the king’s command, they must satisfy our
wants. This they did very thoroughly. For instance, when on the last
day’s trek, some of our oxen gave out, numbers of Zulus were inspanned
in place of them, and by their help the wagons were dragged to the
great kraal, Umgungundhlovu.

Here an outspan place was assigned to us near to the house, or rather
the huts, of a certain missionary of the name of Owen, who with great
courage had ventured into this country. We were received with the
utmost kindness by him and his wife and household, and it is impossible
for me to say what pleasure I found, after all my journeyings, in
meeting an educated man of my own race.

Near to our camp was a stone-covered koppie, where, on the morning
after our arrival, I saw six or eight men executed in a way that I will
not describe. Their crime, according to Mr. Owen, was that they had
bewitched some of the king’s oxen.

While I was recovering from this dreadful spectacle, which,
fortunately, Marie did not witness, the captain Kambula arrived, saying
that Dingaan wished to see me. So taking with me the Hottentot Hans and
two of the Zulus whom I had hired at Delagoa Bay—for the royal orders
were that none of the other white people were to come, I was led
through the fence of the vast town in which stood two thousand huts—the
“multitude of houses” as the Zulus called it—and across a vast open
space in the middle.

On the farther side of this space, where, before long, I was fated to
witness a very tragic scene, I entered a kind of labyrinth. This was
called _siklohlo_, and had high fences with numerous turns, so that it
was impossible to see where one was going or to find the way in or out.
Ultimately, however, I reached a great hut named _intunkulu_, a word
that means the “house of houses,” or the abode of the king, in front of
which I saw a fat man seated on a stool, naked except for the _moocha_
about his middle and necklaces and armlets of blue beads. Two warriors
held their broad shields over his head to protect him from the sun.
Otherwise he was alone, although I felt sure that the numerous passages
around him were filled with guards, for I could hear them moving.

On entering this place Kambula and his companions flung themselves upon
their faces and began to sing praises of which the king took no notice.
Presently he looked up, and appearing to observe me for the first time
asked:

“Who is that white boy?”

Then Kambula rose and said:

“O king, this is the Son of George, whom you commanded me to capture. I
have taken him and the _Amaboona_” (that is, the Boers), “his
companions, and brought them all to you, O king.”

“I remember,” said Dingaan. “The big Boer who was here, and whom
Tambusa”—he was one of Dingaan’s captains—“let go against my will, said
that he was a terrible man who should be killed before he worked great
harm to my people. Why did you not kill him, Kambula, although it is
true he does not look very terrible?”

“Because the king’s word was that I should bring him to the king
living,” answered Kambula. Then he added cheerfully: “Still, if the
king wishes it, I can kill him at once.”

“I don’t know,” said Dingaan doubtfully; “perhaps he can mend guns.”
Next, after reflecting a while, he bade a shield-holder to fetch
someone, I could not hear whom.

“Doubtless,” thought I to myself, “it is the executioner,” and at that
thought a kind of mad rage seized me. Why should my life be ended thus
in youth to satisfy the whim of a savage? And if it must be so, why
should I go alone?

In the inside pocket of my ragged coat I had a small loaded pistol with
two barrels. One of those barrels would kill Dingaan—at five paces I
could not miss that bulk—and the other would blow out my brains, for I
was not minded to have my neck twisted or to be beaten to death with
sticks. Well, if it was to be done, I had better do it at once. Already
my hand was creeping towards the pocket when a new idea, or rather two
ideas, struck me.

The first was that if I shot Dingaan the Zulus would probably massacre
Marie and the others—Marie, whose sweet face I should never see again.
The second was that while there is life there is hope. Perhaps, after
all, he had not sent for an executioner, but for someone else. I would
wait. A few minutes more of existence were worth the having.

The shield-bearer returned, emerging from one of the narrow,
reed-hedged passages, and after him came no executioner, but a young
white man, who, as I knew from the look of him, was English. He saluted
the king by taking off his hat, which I remember was stuck round with
black ostrich feathers, then stared at me.

“O Tho-maas” (that is how he pronounced “Thomas”), said Dingaan, “tell
me if this boy is one of your brothers, or is he a Boer?”

“The king wants to know if you are Dutch or British,” said the white
lad, speaking in English.

“As British as you are,” I answered. “I was born in England, and come
from the Cape.”

“That may be lucky for you,” he said, “because the old witch-doctor,
Zikali, has told him that he must not kill any English. What is your
name? Mine is Thomas Halstead. I am interpreter here.”

“Allan Quatermain. Tell Zikali, whoever he may be, that if he sticks to
his advice I will give him a good present.”

“What are you talking about?” asked Dingaan suspiciously.

“He says he is English, no Boer, O king; that he was born across the
Black Water, and that he comes from the country out of which all the
Boers have trekked.”

At this intelligence Dingaan pricked up his ears.

“Then he can tell me about these Boers,” he said, “and what they are
after, or could if he were able to speak my tongue. I do not trust you
to interpret, you Tho-maas, whom I know to be a liar,” and he glowered
at Halstead.

“I can speak your tongue, though not very well, O king,” I interrupted,
“and I can tell you all about the Boers, for I have lived among them.”

“_Ow!_” said Dingaan, intensely interested. “But perhaps you are also a
liar. Or are you a praying man, like that fool yonder, who is named
Oweena?”—he meant the missionary Mr. Owen—“whom I spare because it is
not lucky to kill one who is mad, although he tries to frighten my
soldiers with tales of a fire into which they will go after they are
dead. As though it matters what happens to them after they are dead!”
he added reflectively, taking a pinch of snuff.

“I am no liar,” I answered. “What have I to lie about?”

“You would lie to save your own life, for all white men are cowards;
not like the Zulus, who love to die for their king. But how are you
named?”

“Your people call me Macumazahn.”

“Well, Macumazahn, if you are no liar, tell me, is it true that these
Boers rebelled against their king who was named George, and fled from
him as the traitor Umsilikazi did from me?”

“Yes,” I answered, “that is true.”

“Now I am sure that you are a liar,” said Dingaan triumphantly. “You
say that you are English and therefore serve your king, or the
_Inkosikaas_” (that is the Great Lady), “who they tell me now sits in
his place. How does it come about then that you are travelling with a
party of these very _Amaboona_ who must be your enemies, since they are
the enemies of your king, or of her who follows after him?”

Now I knew that I was in a tight place, for on this matter of loyalty,
Zulu, and indeed all native ideas, are very primitive. If I said that I
had sympathy with the Boers, Dingaan would set me down as a traitor. If
I said that I hated the Boers, then still I should be a traitor because
I associated with them, and a traitor in his eyes would be one to be
killed. I do not like to talk religion, and anyone who has read what I
have written in various works will admit that I have done so rarely, if
ever. Yet at that moment I put up a prayer for guidance, feeling that
my young life hung upon the answer, and it came to me—whence I do not
know. The essence of that guidance was that I should tell the simple
truth to this fat savage. So I said to him:

“The answer is this, O king. Among those Boers is a maiden whom I love
and who betrothed herself to me since we were ‘so high.’ Her father
took her north. But she sent a message to me saying that her people
died of fever and she starved. So I went up in a ship to save her, and
have saved her, and those who remained alive of her people with her.”

“_Ow!_” said Dingaan; “I understand that reason. It is a good reason.
However many wives he may have, there is no folly that a man will not
commit for the sake of some particular girl who is not yet his wife. I
have done as much myself, especially for one who was called Nada the
Lily, of whom a certain Umslopogaas robbed me, one of my own blood of
whom I am much afraid.”[2]

 [2] _See_ the Author’s book named “Nada the Lily.”


For a while he brooded heavily, then went on:

“Your reason is good, Macumazahn, and I accept it. More, I promise you
this. Perhaps I shall kill these Boers, or perhaps I shall not kill
them. But if I make up my mind to kill them, this girl of yours shall
be spared. Point her out to Kambula here—not to Tho-maas, for he is a
liar and would tell me the wrong one—and she shall be spared.”

“I thank you, O king,” I said; “but what is the use of that if I am to
be killed?”

“I did not say that you were to be killed, Macumazahn, though perhaps I
shall kill you, or perhaps I shall not kill you. It depends upon
whether I find you to be a liar, or not a liar. Now the Boer whom
Tambusa let go against my wish said that you are a mighty magician as
well as a very dangerous man, one who can shoot birds flying on the
wing with a bullet, which is impossible. Can you do so?”

“Sometimes,” I answered.

“Very good, Macumazahn. Now we will see if you are a wizard or a liar.
I will make a bet with you. Yonder by your camp is a hill called ‘Hloma
Amabutu,’ a hill of stones where evildoers are slain. This afternoon
some wicked ones die there, and when they are dead the vultures will
come to devour them. Now this is my bet with you. When those vultures
come you shall shoot at them, and if you kill three out of the first
five on the wing—not on the ground, Macumazahn—then I will spare these
Boers. But if you miss them, then I shall know that you are a liar and
no wizard, and I will kill them every one on the hill Hloma Amabutu. I
will spare none of them except the girl, whom perhaps I will take as a
wife. As to you, I will not yet say what I will do with you.”

Now my first impulse was to refuse this monstrous wager, which meant
that the lives of a number of people were to be set against my skill in
shooting. But young Thomas Halstead, guessing the words that were about
to break from me, said in English:

“Accept unless you are a fool. If you don’t he will cut the throats of
every one of them and stick your girl into the _emposeni_” (that is
harem), “while you will become a prisoner as I am.”

These were words that I could not resent or neglect, so although
despair was in my heart, I said coolly:

“Be it so, O king. I take your wager. If I kill three vultures out of
five as they hover over the hill, then I have your promise that all
those who travel with me shall be allowed to go hence in safety.”

“Yes, yes, Macumazahn; but if you fail to kill them, remember that the
next vultures you shoot at shall be those that come to feed upon their
flesh, for then I shall know that you are no magician, but a common
liar. And now begone, Tho-maas. I will not have you spying on me; and
you, Macumazahn, come hither. Although you talk my tongue so badly, I
would speak with you about the Boers.”

So Halstead went, shrugging his shoulders and muttering as he passed
me:

“I hope you really _can_ shoot.”

After he had left I sat alone for a full hour with Dingaan while he
cross-examined me about the Dutch, their movements and their aims in
travelling to the confines of his country.

I answered his questions as best I could, trying to make out a good
case for them.

At length, when he grew weary of talking, he clapped his hands, whereon
a number of fine girls appeared, two of whom carried pots of beer, from
which he offered me drink.

I replied that I would have none, since beer made the hand shake and
that on the steadiness of my hand that afternoon depended the lives of
many. To do him justice he quite understood the point. Indeed, he
ordered me to be conducted back to the camp at once that I might rest,
and even sent one of his own attendants with me to hold a shield over
my head as I walked so that I should be protected from the sun.

“_Hamba gachle_” (that is “Go softly”), said the wicked old tyrant to
me as I departed under the guidance of Kambula. “This afternoon, one
hour before sundown, I will meet you at Hloma Amabutu, and there shall
be settled the fate of these _Amaboona_, your companions.”

When I reached the camp it was to find all the Boers clustered together
waiting for me, and with them the Reverend Mr. Owen and his people,
including a Welsh servant of his, a woman of middle age who, I
remember, was called Jane.

“Well,” said the Vrouw Prinsloo, “and what is your news, young man?”

“My news, aunt,” I answered, “is that one hour before sundown to-day I
have to shoot vultures on the wing against the lives of all of you.
This you owe to that false-hearted hound Hernan Pereira, who told
Dingaan that I am a magician. Now Dingaan would prove it. He thinks
that only by magic can a man shoot soaring vultures with a bullet, and
as he is determined to kill you all, except perhaps Marie, in the form
of a bet he has set me a task which he believes to be impossible. If I
fail, the bet is lost, and so are your lives. If I succeed I think your
lives will be spared, since Kambula there tells me that the king always
makes it a point of honour to pay his bets. Now you have the truth, and
I hope you like it,” and I laughed bitterly.

When I had finished a perfect storm of execration broke from the Boers.
If curses could have killed Pereira, surely he would have died upon the
spot, wherever he might be. Only two of them were silent, Marie, who
turned very pale, poor girl, and her father. Presently one of them, I
think it was Meyer, rounded on him viciously and asked him what he
thought now of that devil, his nephew.

“I think there must be some mistake,” answered Marais quietly, “since
Hernan cannot have wished that we should all be put to death.”

“No,” shouted Meyer; “but he wished that Allan Quatermain should, which
is just as bad; and now it has come about that once more our lives
depend upon this English boy.”

“At any rate,” replied Marais, looking at me oddly, “it seems that he
is not to be killed, whether he shoots the vultures or misses them.”

“That remains to be proved, mynheer,” I answered hotly, for the
insinuation stung me. “But please understand that if all of you, my
companions, are to be slaughtered, and Marie is to be put among this
black brute’s women, as he threatens, I have no wish to live on.”

“My God! does he threaten that?” said Marais. “Surely you must have
misunderstood him, Allan.”

“Do you think that I should lie to you on such a matter—” I began.

But, before I could proceed, the Vrouw Prinsloo thrust herself between
us, crying:

“Be silent, you, Marais, and you too, Allan. Is this a time that you
should quarrel and upset yourself, Allan, so that when the trial comes
you will shoot your worst and not your best? And is this a time, Henri
Marais, that you should throw insults at one on whom all our lives
hang, instead of praying for God’s vengeance upon your accursed nephew?
Come, Allan, and take food. I have fried the liver of that heifer which
the king sent us; it is ready and very good. After you have eaten it
you must lie down and sleep a while.”

Now among the household of the Reverend Mr. Owen was an English boy
called William Wood, who was not more than twelve or fourteen years of
age. This lad knew both Dutch and Zulu, and acted as interpreter to the
Owen family during the absence on a journey of a certain Mr. Hulley,
who really filled that office. While this conversation was taking place
in Dutch he was engaged in rendering every word of it into English for
the benefit of the clergyman and his family. When Mr. Owen understood
the full terror of the situation, he broke in saying:

“This is not a time to eat or to sleep, but a time to pray that the
heart of the savage Dingaan may be turned. Come, let us pray!”

“Yes,” rejoined Vrouw Prinsloo, when William Wood had translated. “Do
you pray, _Predicant_, and all the rest of you who have nothing else to
do, and while you are about it pray also that the bullets of Allan
Quatermain may not be turned. As for me and Allan, we have other things
to see to, so you must pray a little harder to cover us as well as
yourselves. Now you come along, nephew Allan, or that liver may be
overdone and give you indigestion, which is worse for shooting than
even bad temper. No, not another word. If you try to speak any more,
Henri Marais, I will box your ears,” and she lifted a hand like a leg
of mutton, then, as Marais retreated before her, seized me by the
collar as though I were a naughty boy and led me away to the wagons.




CHAPTER XIII.
THE REHEARSAL


By the women’s wagon we found the liver cooked in its frying-pan, as
the vrouw had said. Indeed, it was just done to a turn. Selecting a
particularly massive slice, she proceeded to take it from the pan with
her fingers in order to set it upon a piece of tin, from which she had
first removed the more evident traces of the morning meal with her
constant companion, the ancient and unwashen _vatdoek_. As it chanced
the effort was not very successful, since the boiling liver fat burnt
the vrouw’s fingers, causing her to drop it on the grass, and, I am
sorry to add, to swear as well. Not to be defeated, however, having
first sucked her fingers to ease their smart, she seized the sizzling
liver with the _vatdoek_ and deposited it upon the dirty tin.

“There, nephew,” she said triumphantly, “there are more ways of killing
a cat than by drowning. What a fool I was not to think of the _vatdoek_
at first. Allemachte! how the flesh has burnt me; I don’t suppose that
being killed would hurt much more. Also, if the worst comes to the
worst, it will soon be over. Think of it, Allan, by to-night I may be
an angel, dressed in a long white nightgown like those my mother gave
me when I was married, which I cut up for baby-clothes because I found
them chilly wear, having always been accustomed to sleep in my vest and
petticoat. Yes, and I shall have wings, too, like those on a white
gander, only bigger if they are to carry _my_ weight.”

“And a crown of Glory,” I suggested.

“Yes, of course, a crown of Glory—very large, since I shall be a
martyr; but I hope one will only have to wear it on Sundays, as I never
could bear anything heavy on my hair; moreover, it would remind me of a
Kaffir’s head-ring done in gold, and I shall have had enough of
Kaffirs. Then there will be the harp,” she went on as her imagination
took fire at the prospect of these celestial delights. “Have you ever
seen a harp, Allan? I haven’t except that which King David carries in
the picture in the Book, which looks like a broken _rimpi_ chair frame
set up edgeways. As for playing the thing, they will have to teach me,
that’s all, which will be a difficult business, seeing that I would
sooner listen to cats on the roof than to music, and as for making it—”

So she chattered on, as I believe with the object of diverting and
amusing me, for she was a shrewd old soul who knew how important it was
that I should be kept in an equable frame of mind at this crisis in our
fates.

Meanwhile I was doing my best with the lump of liver, that tasted
painfully of _vatdoek_ and was gritty with sand. Indeed, when the
vrouw’s back was turned I managed to throw the most of it to Hans
behind me, who swallowed it at a gulp as a dog does, since he did not
wish to be caught chewing it.

“God in heaven! how fast you eat, nephew,” said the vrouw, catching
sight of my empty tin. Then, eyeing the voracious Hottentot
suspiciously, she added: “That yellow dog of yours hasn’t stolen it,
has he? If so, I’ll teach him.”

“No, no, vrouw,” answered Hans in alarm. “No meat has passed my lips
this day, except what I licked out of the pan after breakfast.”

“Then, Allan, you will certainly have indigestion, which is just what I
wanted to avoid. Have I not often told you that you should chew your
bit twenty times before you swallow, which I would do myself if I had
any back teeth left? Here, drink this milk; it is only a little sour
and will settle your stomach,” and she produced a black bottle and
subjected it to the attentions of the _vatdoek_, growing quite angry
when I declined it and sent for water.

Next she insisted upon my getting into her own bed in the wagon to
sleep, forbidding me to smoke, which she said made the hand shake.
Thither, then, I went, after a brief conversation with Hans, whom I
directed to clean my rifle thoroughly. For I wished to be alone and
knew that I had little chance of solitude outside of that somewhat
fusty couch.

To tell the truth, although I shut my eyes to deceive the vrouw, who
looked in occasionally to see how I was getting on, no sleep came to me
that afternoon—at least, not for a long while. How could I sleep in
that hot place when my heart was torn with doubt and terror? Think of
it, reader, think of it! An hour or two, and on my skill would hang the
lives of eight white people—men, women, and children, and the safety or
the utter shame of the woman whom I loved and who loved me. No, she
should be spared the worst. I would give her my pistol, and if there
were need she would know what to do.

The fearful responsibility was more than I could bear. I fell into a
veritable agony; I trembled and even wept a little. Then I thought of
my father and what he would do in such circumstances, and began to pray
as I had never prayed before.

I implored the Power above me to give me strength and wisdom; not to
let me fail in this hour of trouble, and thereby bring these poor
people to a bloody death. I prayed till the perspiration streamed down
my face; then suddenly I fell into sleep or swoon. I don’t know how
long I lay thus, but I think it must have been the best part of an
hour. At last I woke up all in an instant, and as I woke I distinctly
heard a tiny voice, unlike any other voice in the whole world, speak
inside my head, or so it seemed to me, saying:

“_Go to the hill Hloma Amabutu, and watch how the vultures fly. Do what
comes into your mind, and even if you seem to fail, fear nothing._”

I sat up on the old vrouw’s bed, and felt that some mysterious change
had come over me. I was no longer the same man. My doubts and terrors
had gone; my hand was like a rock; my heart was light. I knew that I
should kill those three vultures. Of course the story seems absurd, and
easy to be explained by the state of my nerves under the strain which
was being put upon them, and for aught I know that may be its true
meaning. Yet I am not ashamed to confess that I have always held, and
still hold, otherwise. I believe that in my extremity some kindly Power
did speak to me in answer to my earnest prayers and to those of others,
giving me guidance and, what I needed still more, judgment and
calmness. At any rate, that this was my conviction at the moment may be
seen from the fact that I hastened to obey the teachings of that tiny,
unnatural voice.

Climbing out of the wagon, I went to Hans, who was seated near by in
the full glare of the hot sun, at which he seemed to stare with
unblinking eyes.

“Where’s the rifle, Hans?” I said.

“_Intombi_ is here, baas, where I have put her to keep her cool, so
that she may not go off before it is wanted,” and he pointed to a
little grave-like heap of gathered grass at his side.

The natives, I should explain, named this particular gun _Intombi_,
which means a young girl, because it was so much slimmer and more
graceful than other guns.

“Is it clean?” I asked.

“Never was she cleaner since she was born out of the fire, baas. Also,
the powder has been sifted and set to dry in the sun with the caps, and
the bullets have been trued to the barrel, so that there may be no
accidents when it comes to the shooting. If you miss the _aasvogels_,
baas, it will not be the fault of _Intombi_ or of the powder and the
bullets; it will be your own fault.”

“That’s comforting,” I answered. “Well, come on, I want to go to the
Death-hill yonder.”

“Why, baas, before the time?” asked the Hottentot, shrinking back a
little. “It is no place to visit till one is obliged. These Zulus say
that ghosts sit there even in the daylight, haunting the rocks where
they were made ghosts.”

“Vultures sit or fly there also, Hans; and I would see how they fly,
that I may know when and where to shoot at them.”

“That is right, baas,” said the clever Hottentot. “This is not like
firing at geese in the Groote Kloof. The geese go straight, like an
assegai to its mark. But the _aasvogels_ wheel round and round, always
on the turn; it is easy to miss a bird that is turning, baas.”

“Very easy. Come on.”

Just as we were starting Vrouw Prinsloo appeared from behind the other
wagon, and with her Marie, who, I noticed, was very pale and whose
beautiful eyes were red, as though with weeping.

The vrouw asked me where we were going. I told her. After considering a
little, she said that was a good thought of mine, as it was always well
to study the ground before a battle.

I nodded, and led Marie aside behind some thorn trees that grew near.

“Oh! Allan, what will be the end of this?” she asked piteously. High as
was her courage it seemed to fail her now.

“A good end, dearest,” I answered. “We shall come out of this hole
safely, as we have of many others.”

“How do you know that, Allan, which is known to God alone?”

“Because God told me, Marie,” and I repeated to her the story of the
voice I had heard in my dream, which seemed to comfort her.

“Yet, yet,” she exclaimed doubtfully, “it was but a dream, Allan, and
dreams are such uncertain things. You may fail, after all.”

“Do I look like one who will fail, Marie?”

She studied me from head to foot, then answered:

“No, you do not, although you did when you came back from the king’s
huts. Now you are quite changed. Still, Allan, you may fail, and
then—what? Some of those dreadful Zulus have been here while you were
sleeping, bidding us all make ready to go to the Hill of Death. They
say that Dingaan is in earnest. If you do not kill the vultures, he
will kill us. It seems that they are sacred birds, and if they escape
he will think he has nothing to fear from the white men and their
magic, and so will make a beginning by butchering us. I mean the rest
of us, for I am to be kept alive, and oh! what shall I do, Allan?”

I looked at her, and she looked at me. Then I took the double-barrelled
pistol out of my pocket and gave it to her.

“It is loaded and on the half-cock,” I said.

She nodded, and hid it in her dress beneath her apron. Then without
more words we kissed and parted, for both of us feared to prolong that
scene.

The hill Hloma Amabutu was quite close to our encampment and the huts
of the Reverend Mr. Owen, scarcely a quarter of a mile off, I should
say, rising from the flat veld on the further side of a little
depression that hardly amounted to a valley. As we approached it I
noticed its peculiar and blasted appearance, for whereas all around the
grass was vivid with the green of spring, on this place none seemed to
grow. An eminence strewn with tumbled heaps of blackish rock, and among
them a few struggling, dark-leaved bushes; that was its appearance.
Moreover, many of these boulders looked as though they had been
splashed and lined with whitewash, showing that they were the
resting-place of hundreds of gorged vultures.

I believe it is the Chinese who declare that particular localities have
good or evil influences attached to them, some kind of spirit of their
own, and really Hloma Amabutu and a few other spots that I am
acquainted with in Africa give colour to the fancy. Certainly as I set
foot upon that accursed ground, that Golgotha, that Place of Skulls, a
shiver went through me. It may have been caused by the atmosphere,
moral and actual, of the mount, or it may have been a prescience of a
certain dreadful scene which within a few months I was doomed to
witness there. Or perhaps the place itself and the knowledge of the
trial before me sent a sudden chill through my healthy blood. I cannot
say which it was, but the fact remains as I have stated, although a
minute or two later, when I saw what kind of sleepers lay upon that
mount, it would not have been necessary for me to seek any far-fetched
explanation of my fear.

Across this hill, winding in and out between the rough rocks that lay
here, there and everywhere like hailstones after a winter storm, ran
sundry paths. It seems that the shortest road to various places in the
neighbourhood of the Great Kraal ran over it, and although no Zulu ever
dared to set foot there between sun-set and rise, in the daytime they
used these paths freely enough. But I suppose that they also held that
this evil-omened field of death had some spirit of its own, some
invisible but imminent fiend, who needed to be propitiated, lest soon
he should claim them also.

This was their method of propitiation, a common one enough, I believe,
in many lands, though what may be its meaning I cannot tell. As the
traveller came to those spots where the paths cut across each other, he
took a stone and threw it on to a heap that had been accumulated there
by the hands of other travellers. There were many such heaps upon the
hill, over a dozen, I think, and the size of them was great. I should
say that the biggest contained quite fifty loads of stones, and the
smallest not fewer than twenty or thirty.

Now, Hans, although he had never set foot there before, seemed to have
learned all the traditions of the place, and what rites were necessary
to avert its curse. At any rate, when we came to the first heap, he
cast a stone upon it, and begged me to do the same. I laughed and
refused, but when we reached the second heap the same thing happened.
Again I refused, whereon, before we came to a third and larger pile,
Hans sat down upon the ground and began to groan, swearing that he
would not go one step farther unless I promised to make the accustomed
offering.

“Why not, you fool?” I asked.

“Because if you neglect it, baas, I think that we shall stop here for
ever. Oh! you may laugh, but I tell you that already you have brought
ill-luck upon yourself. Remember my words, baas, when you miss two of
the five _aasvogels_.”

“Bosh!” I exclaimed, or, rather, its Dutch equivalent. Still, as this
talk of missing vultures touched me nearly, and it is always as well to
conform to native prejudices, at the next and two subsequent heaps I
cast my stone as humbly as the most superstitious Zulu in the land.

By this time we had reached the summit, which may have been two hundred
yards long. It was hog-backed in shape, with a kind of depression in
the middle cleared of stones, either by the hand of man or nature, and
not unlike a large circus in its general conformation.

Oh! the sight that met my eyes. All about lay the picked and scattered
bones of men and women, many of them broken up by the jaws of hyenas.
Some were quite fresh, for the hair still clung to the skulls, others
blanched and old. But new or ancient there must have been hundreds of
them. Moreover, on the sides of the hill it was the same story, though
there, for the most part, the bones had been gathered into gleaming
heaps. No wonder that the vultures loved Hloma Amabutu, the Place of
Slaughter of the bloody Zulu king.

Of these horrible birds, however, at the moment not one was to be seen.
As there had been no execution for a few hours they were seeking their
food elsewhere. Now, for my own purposes, I wanted to see them, since
otherwise my visit was in vain, and presently bethought myself of a
method of securing their arrival.

“Hans,” I said, “I am going to pretend to kill you, and then you must
lie quite still out there like one dead. Even if the _aasvogels_ settle
on you, you must lie quite still, so that I may see whence they come
and how they settle.”

The Hottentot did not take at all kindly to this suggestion. Indeed, he
flatly refused to obey me, giving sundry good reasons. He said that
this kind of rehearsal was ill-omened; that coming events have a way of
casting their shadow before, and he did not wish to furnish the event.
He said that the Zulus declared that the sacred _aasvogels_ of Hloma
Amabutu were as savage as lions, and that when once they saw a man down
they would tear him to pieces, dead or living. In short, Hans and I
came to an acute difference of opinion. As for every reason it was
necessary that my view should prevail, however, I did not hesitate to
put matters to him very plainly.

“Hans,” I said, “you have to be a bait for vultures; choose if you will
be a live bait or a dead bait,” and I cocked the rifle significantly,
although, in truth, the last thing that I wished or intended to do was
to shoot my faithful old Hottentot friend. But Hans, knowing all I had
at stake, came to a different conclusion.

“Allemachte! baas,” he said, “I understand, and I do not blame you.
Well, if I obey alive, perhaps my guardian Snake” (or spirit) “will
protect me from the evil omen, and perhaps the _aasvogels_ will not
pick out my eyes. But if once you send a bullet through my stomach—why,
then everything is finished, and for Hans it is ‘Good night, sleep
well.’ I will obey you, baas, and lie where you wish, only, I pray you,
do not forget me and go away, leaving me with those devil birds.”

I promised him faithfully that I would not. Then we went through a very
grim little pantomime. Proceeding to the centre of the arena-like
space, I lifted the gun, and appeared to dash out Hans’ brains with its
butt. He fell upon his back, kicked about a little, and lay still. This
finished Act 1.

Act 2 was that, capering like a brute of a Zulu executioner, I retired
from my victim and hid myself in a bush on the edge of the plateau at a
distance of forty yards. After this there was a pause. The place was
intensely bright with sunshine and intensely silent; as silent as the
skeletons of the murdered men about me; as silent as Hans, who lay
there looking so very small and dead in that big theatre where no grass
grew. It was an eerie wait in such surroundings, but at length the
curtain rang up for Act 3.

In the infinite arch of blue above me I perceived a speck, no larger
than a mote of dust. The _aasvogel_ on watch up there far out of the
range of man’s vision had seen the deed, and, by sinking downwards,
signalled it to his companions that were quartering the sky for fifty
miles round; for these birds prey by sight, not by smell. Down he came
and down, and long before he had reached the neighbourhood of earth
other specks appeared in the distant blue. Now he was not more than
four or five hundred yards above me, and began to wheel, floating round
the place upon his wide wings, and sinking as he wheeled. So he sank
softly and slowly until he was about a hundred and fifty feet above
Hans. Then suddenly he paused, hung quite steady for a few seconds,
shut his wings and fell like a bolt, only opening them again just
before he reached the earth.

Here he settled, tilting forward in that odd way which vultures have,
and scrambling a few awkward paces until he gained his balance. Then he
froze into immobility, gazing with an awful, stony glare at the
prostrate Hans, who lay within about fifteen feet of him. Scarcely was
this _aasvogel_ down, when others, summoned from the depths of sky, did
as he had done. They appeared, they sank, they wheeled, always from
east to west, the way the sun travels. They hovered for a few seconds,
then fell like stones, pitched on to their beaks, recovered themselves,
waddled forward into line, and sat gazing at Hans. Soon there was a
great ring of them about him, all immovable, all gazing, all waiting
for something.

Presently that something appeared in the shape of an _aasvogel_ which
was nearly twice as big as any of the others. This was what the Boers
and the natives call the “king vulture,” one of which goes with every
flock. He it is who rules the roost and also the carcase, which without
his presence and permission none dare to attack. Whether this vile fowl
is of a different species from the others, or whether he is a bird of
more vigorous growth and constitution that has outgrown the rest and
thus become their overlord, is more than I can tell. At least it is
certain, as I can testify from long and constant observation, that
almost every flock of vultures has its king.

When this particular royalty had arrived, the other _aasvogels_, of
which perhaps there were now fifty or sixty gathered round Hans, began
to show signs of interested animation. They looked at the king bird,
they looked at Hans, stretching out their naked red necks and winking
their brilliant eyes. I, however, did not pay particular attention to
those upon the earth, being amply occupied in watching their fellows in
the air.

With delight I observed that the vulture is a very conservative
creature. They all did what doubtless they have done since the days of
Adam or earlier—wheeled, and then hung that little space of time before
they dropped to the ground like lead. This, then, would be the moment
at which to shoot them, when for four or five seconds they offered
practically a sitting target. Now, at that distance, always under a
hundred yards, I knew well that I could hit a tea plate every shot, and
a vulture is much larger than a tea plate. So it seemed to me that,
barring accidents, I had little to fear from the terrible trial of
skill which lay before me. Again and again I covered the hovering birds
with my rifle, feeling that if I had pressed the trigger I should have
pierced them through.

Thinking it well to practise, I continued this game for a long while,
till at last it came to an unexpected end. Suddenly I heard a scuffling
sound. Dropping my glance I saw that the whole mob of _aasvogels_ were
rushing in upon Hans, helping themselves forward by flapping their
great wings, and that about three feet in front of them was their king.
Next instant Hans vanished, and from the centre of that fluffy,
stinking mass there arose a frightful yell.

As a matter of fact, as I found afterwards, the king vulture had
fastened on to his snub nose, whilst its dreadful companions, having
seized other portions of his frame, were beginning to hang back after
their fashion in order to secure some chosen morsel. Hans kicked and
screamed, and I rushed in shouting, causing them to rise in a great,
flapping cloud that presently vanished this way and that. Within a
minute they had all gone, and the Hottentot and I were left alone.

“That is good,” I said. “You played well.”

“Good! baas,” he answered, “and I with two cuts in my nose in which I
can lay my finger, and bites all over me. Look how my trousers are
torn. Look at my head—where is the hair? Look at my nose. Good! Played
well! It is those _verdomde aasvogels_ that played. Oh! baas, if you
had seen and smelt them, you would not say that it was good. See, one
more second and I, who have two nostrils, should have had four.”

“Never mind, Hans,” I said, “it is only a scratch, and I will make you
a present of some new trousers. Also, here is tobacco for you. Come to
the bush; let us talk.”

So we went, and when Hans was a little composed I told him all that I
had observed about the habits of the _aasvogel_ in the air, and he told
me all that he had observed about their habits on the ground, which, as
I might not shoot them sitting, did not interest me. Still, he agreed
with me that the right moment to fire would be just before they
pounced.

Whilst we were still talking we heard a sound of shouts, and, looking
over the brow of the hill that faced towards Umgungundhlovu, we saw a
melancholy sight. Being driven up the slope towards us by three
executioners and a guard of seven or eight soldiers, their hands tied
behind their backs, were three men, one very old, one of about fifty
years of age, and one a lad, who did not look more than eighteen. As I
soon heard, they were of a single family, the grandfather, the father,
and the eldest son, who had been seized upon some ridiculous charge of
witchcraft, but really in order that the king might take their cattle.

Having been tried and condemned by the _Nyangas_, or witch-doctors,
these poor wretches were now doomed to die. Indeed, not content with
thus destroying the heads of the tribe, present and to come, for three
generations, all their descendants and collaterals had already been
wiped out by Dingaan, so that he might pose as sole heir to the family
cattle.

Such were the dreadful cruelties that happened in Zululand in those
days.




CHAPTER XIV.
THE PLAY


The doomed three were driven by their murderers into the centre of the
depression, within a few yards of which Hans and I were standing.

After them came the head executioner, a great brute who wore a
curiously shaped leopard-skin cap—I suppose as a badge of office—and
held in his hand a heavy kerry, the shaft of which was scored with many
notches, each of them representing a human life.

“See, White Man,” he shouted, “here is the bait which the king sends to
draw the holy birds to you. Had it not been that you needed such bait,
perhaps these wizards would have escaped. But the Black One said the
little Son of George, who is named Macumazahn, needs them that he may
show his magic, and therefore they must die to-day.”

Now, at this information I turned positively sick. Nor did it make me
feel better when the youngest of the victims, hearing the executioner’s
words, flung himself upon his knees, and began to implore me to spare
him. His grandfather also addressed me, saying:

“Chief, will it not be enough if I die? I am old, and my life does not
matter. Or if one is not sufficient, take me and my son, and let the
lad, my grandson, go free. We are all of us innocent of any witchcraft,
and he is not even old enough to practise such things, being but an
unmarried boy. Chief, you, also, are young. Would not your heart be
heavy if you had to be slain when the sun of your life was still new in
the sky? Think, White Chief, what your father would feel, if you have
one, should he be forced to see you killed before his eyes, that some
stranger might use your body to show his skill with a magic weapon by
slaying the wild things that would eat it.”

Now, almost with tears, I broke in, explaining to the venerable man as
well as I could that their horrible fate had nothing to do with me. I
told him that I was innocent of their blood, who was forced to be there
to try to shoot vultures on the wing in order to save my white
companions from a doom similar to their own. He listened attentively,
asking a question now and again, and when he had mastered my meaning,
said with a most dignified calmness:

“Now I understand, White Man, and am glad to learn that you are not
cruel, as I thought. My children,” he added, turning to the others,
“let us trouble this _Inkoos_ no more. He only does what he must do to
save the lives of his brethren by his skill, if he can. If we continue
to plead with him and stir his heart to pity, the sorrow swelling in it
may cause his hand to shake, and then they will die also, and their
blood be on his head and ours. My children, it is the king’s will that
we should be slain. Let us make ready to obey the king, as men of our
House have always done. White lord, we thank you for your good words.
May you live long, and may good fortune sleep in your hut to the end.
May you shoot straight, also, with your magic tool, and thereby win the
lives of your company out of the hand of the king. Farewell, _Inkoos_,”
and since he could not lift his bound hands in salutation, he bowed to
me, as did the others.

Then they walked to a little distance, and, seating themselves on the
ground, began to talk together, and after a while to drone some strange
chant in unison. The executioners and the guards also sat down not far
away, laughing, chatting, and passing a horn of snuff from hand to
hand. Indeed, I observed that the captain of them even took some snuff
to the victims, and held it in his palm beneath their noses while they
drew it up their nostrils and politely thanked him between the sneezes.

As for myself, I lit a pipe and smoked it, for I seemed to require a
stimulant, or, rather, a sedative. Before it was finished Hans, who was
engaged in doctoring his scratches made by the vultures’ beaks with a
concoction of leaves which he had been chewing, exclaimed suddenly in
his matter-of-fact voice:

“See, baas, here they come, the white people on one side and the black
on the other, just like the goats and the sheep at Judgment Day in the
Book.”

I looked, and there to my right appeared the party of Boers, headed by
the Vrouw Prinsloo, who held the remnants of an old umbrella over her
head. To the left advanced a number of Zulu nobles and councillors, in
front of whom waddled Dingaan arrayed in his bead dancing dress. He was
supported by two stalwart body-servants, whilst a third held a shield
over his head to protect him from the sun, and a fourth carried a large
stool, upon which he was to sit. Behind each party, also, I perceived a
number of Zulus in their war-dress, all of them armed with broad
stabbing spears.

The two parties arrived at the stone upon which I was sitting almost
simultaneously, as probably it had been arranged that they should do,
and halted, staring at each other. As for me, I sat still upon my stone
and smoked on.

“Allemachte! Allan,” puffed the Vrouw Prinsloo, who was breathless with
her walk up the hill, “so here you are! As you did not come back, I
thought you had run away and left us, like that stinkcat Pereira.”

“Yes, _Tante_ (aunt), here I am,” I answered gloomily, “and I wish to
heaven that I was somewhere else.”

Just then Dingaan, having settled his great bulk upon the stool and
recovered his breath, called to the lad Halstead, who was with him, and
said:

“O Tho-maas, ask your brother, Macumazahn, if he is ready to try to
shoot the vultures. If not, as I wish to be fair, I will give him a
little more time to make his magic medicine.”

I replied sulkily that I was as ready as I was ever likely to be.

Then the Vrouw Prinsloo, understanding that the king of the Zulus was
before her, advanced upon him, waving her umbrella. Catching hold of
Halstead, who understood Dutch, she forced him to translate an
harangue, which she addressed to Dingaan.

Had he rendered it exactly as it came from her lips, we should all have
been dead in five minutes, but, luckily, that unfortunate young man had
learnt some of the guile of the serpent during his sojourn among the
Zulus, and varied her vigorous phrases. The gist of her discourse was
that he, Dingaan, was a black-hearted and bloody-minded villain, with
whom the Almighty would come even sooner or later (as, indeed, He did),
and that if he dared to touch one hair of her or of her companions’
heads, the Boers, her countrymen, would prove themselves to be the
ministers of the Almighty in that matter (as, indeed, they did). As
translated by Halstead into Zulu, what she said was that Dingaan was
the greatest king in the whole world; in fact, that there was not, and
never had been, any such a king either in power, wisdom, or personal
beauty, and that if she and her companions had to die, the sight of his
glory consoled them for their deaths.

“Indeed,” said Dingaan suspiciously, “if that is what this man-woman
says, her eyes tell one story and her lips another. Oh! Tho-maas, lie
no more. Speak the true words of the white chieftainess, lest I should
find them out otherwise, and give you to the slayers.”

Thus adjured, Halstead explained that he had not yet told all the
words. The “man-woman,” who was, as he, Dingaan, supposed, a great
chieftainess among the Dutch, added that if he, the mighty and glorious
king, the earth-shaker, the world-eater, killed her or any of her
subjects, her people would avenge her by killing him and his people.

“Does she say that?” said Dingaan. “Then, as I thought, these Boers are
dangerous, and not the peaceful folk they make themselves out to be,”
and he brooded for a while, staring at the ground. Presently he lifted
his head and went on: “Well, a bet is a bet, and therefore I will not
wipe out this handful, as otherwise I would have done at once. Tell the
old cow of a chieftainess that, notwithstanding her threats, I stick to
my promise. If the little Son of George, Macumazahn, can shoot three
vultures out of five by help of his magic, then she and her servants
shall go free. If not, the vultures which he has missed shall feed on
them, and afterwards I will talk with her people when they come to
avenge her. Now, enough of this _indaba_. Bring those evildoers here
that they may thank and praise me, who give them so merciful an end.”

So the grandfather, the father, and the son were hustled before Dingaan
by the soldiers, and greeted him with the royal salute of “_bayète_.”

“O king,” said the old man, “I and my children are innocent. Yet if it
pleases you, O king, I am ready to die, and so is my son. Yet we pray
you to spare the little one. He is but a boy, who may grow up to do you
good service, as I have done to you and your House for many years.”

“Be silent, you white-headed dog!” answered Dingaan fiercely. “This lad
is a wizard, like the rest of you, and would grow up to bewitch me and
to plot with my enemies. Know that I have stamped out all your family,
and shall I then leave him to breed another that would hate me? Begone
to the World of Spirits, and tell them how Dingaan deals with
sorcerers.”

The old man tried to speak again, for evidently he loved this
grandchild of his, but a soldier struck him in the face, and Dingaan
shouted:

“What! Are you not satisfied? I tell you that if you say more I will
force you to kill the boy with your own hand. Take them away.”

Then I turned and hid my face, as did all the white folk. Presently I
heard the old man, whom they had saved to the last that he might
witness the deaths of his descendants, cry in a loud voice:

“On the night of the thirtieth full moon from this day I, the
far-sighted, I, the prophet, summon thee, Dingaan, to meet me and mine
in the Land of Ghosts, and there to pay—”

Then with a roar of horror the executioners fell on him and he died.
When there was silence I looked up, and saw that the king, who had
turned a dirty yellow hue with fright, for he was very superstitious,
was trembling and wiping the sweat from his brow.

“You should have kept the wizard alive,” he said in a shaky voice to
the head slayer, who was engaged in cutting three more nicks on the
handle of his dreadful kerry. “Fool, I would have heard the rest of his
lying message.”

The man answered humbly that he thought it best it should remain
unspoken, and got himself out of sight as soon as possible. Here I may
remark that by an odd coincidence Dingaan actually was killed about
thirty moons from that time. Mopo, his general, who slew his brother
Chaka, slew him also with the help of Umslopogaas, the son of Chaka. In
after years Umslopogaas told me the story of the dreadful ghost-haunted
death of this tyrant, but, of course, he could not tell me exactly upon
what day it happened. Therefore I do not know whether the prophecy was
strictly accurate.[3]

 [3] For the history of the death of Dingaan, see the Author’s “Nada
 the Lily.”


The three victims lay dead in the hollow of the Hill of Death.
Presently the king, recovering himself, gave orders that the spectators
should be moved back to places where they could see what happened
without frightening the vultures. So the Boers, attended by their band
of soldiers, who were commanded to slay them at once if they attempted
to escape, went one way, and Dingaan and his Zulus went the other,
leaving Hans and myself alone behind our bush. As the white people
passed me, Vrouw Prinsloo wished me good luck in a cheerful voice,
although I could see that her poor old hand was shaking, and she was
wiping her eyes with the _vatdoek_. Henri Marais, also in broken tones,
implored me to shoot straight for his daughter’s sake. Then came Marie,
pale but resolute, who said nothing, but only looked me in the eyes,
and touched the pocket of her dress, in which I knew the pistol lay
hid. Of the rest of them I took no notice.

The moment, that dreadful moment of trial, had come at last; and oh!
the suspense and the waiting were hard to bear. It seemed an age before
the first speck, that I knew to be a vulture, appeared thousands of
feet above me and began to descend in wide circles.

“Oh, baas,” said poor Hans, “this is worse than shooting at the geese
in the Groote Kloof. Then you could only lose your horse, but now—”

“Be silent,” I hissed, “and give me the rifle.”

The vulture wheeled and sank, sank and wheeled. I glanced towards the
Boers, and saw that they were all of them on their knees. I glanced
towards the Zulus, and saw that they were watching as, I think, they
had never watched anything before, for to them this was a new
excitement. Then I fixed my eyes upon the bird.

Its last circle was accomplished. Before it pounced it hung on wide,
outstretched wings, as the others had done, its head towards me. I drew
a deep breath, lifted the rifle, got the foresight dead upon its
breast, and touched the hair-trigger. As the charge exploded I saw the
_aasvogel_ give a kind of backward twist. Next instant I heard a loud
clap, and a surge of joy went through me, for I thought that the bullet
had found its billet. But alas! it was not so.

The clap was that of the air disturbed by the passing of the ball and
the striking of this air against the stiff feathers of the wings.
Anyone who has shot at great birds on the wing with a bullet will be
acquainted with the sound. Instead of falling the vulture recovered
itself. Not knowing the meaning of this unaccustomed noise, it dropped
quietly to earth and sat down near the bodies, pitching forward in the
natural way and running a few paces, as the others had done that
afternoon. Evidently it was quite unhurt.

“Missed!” gasped Hans as he grasped the rifle to load it. “Oh! why did
you not throw a stone on to the first heap?”

I gave Hans a look that must have frightened him; at any rate, he spoke
no more. From the Boers went up a low groan. Then they began to pray
harder than ever, while the Zulus clustered round the king and
whispered to him. I learned afterwards that he was giving heavy odds
against me, ten to one in cattle, which they were obliged to take,
unwillingly enough.

Hans finished loading, capped and cocked the rifle, and handed it to
me. By now other vultures were appearing. Being desperately anxious to
get the thing over one way or another, at the proper moment I took the
first of them. Again I covered it dead and pressed. Again as the gun
exploded I saw that backward lurch of the bird, and heard the clap of
the air upon its wings. Then—oh horror!—this _aasvogel_ turned quietly,
and began to mount the ladder of the sky in the same fashion as it had
descended. I had missed once more.

“The second heap of stones has done this, baas,” said Hans faintly, and
this time I did not even look at him. I only sat down and buried my
face in my hands. One more such miss, and then—

Hans began to whisper to me.

“Baas,” he said, “those _aasvogels_ see the flash of the gun, and shy
at it like a horse. Baas, you are shooting into their faces, for they
all hang with their beaks toward you before they drop. You must get
behind them, and fire into their tails, for even an _aasvogel_ cannot
see with its tail.”

I let fall my hands and stared at him. Surely the poor fellow had been
inspired from on high! I understood it all now. While their beaks were
towards me, I might fire at fifty vultures and never hit one, for each
time they would swerve from the flash, causing the bullet to miss them,
though but by a little.

“Come,” I gasped, and began to walk quickly round the edge of the
depression to a rock, which I saw opposite about a hundred yards away.
My journey took me near the Zulus, who mocked me as I passed, asking
where my magic was, and if I wished to see the white people killed
presently. Dingaan was now offering odds of fifty cattle to one against
me, but no one would take the bet even with the king.

I made no answer; no, not even when they asked me “if I had thrown down
my spear and was running away.” Grimly, despairingly, I marched on to
the rock, and took shelter behind it with Hans. The Boers, I saw, were
still upon their knees, but seemed to have ceased praying. The children
were weeping; the men stared at each other; Vrouw Prinsloo had her arm
about Marie’s waist. Waiting there behind the rock, my courage returned
to me, as it sometimes does in the last extremity. I remembered my
dream and took comfort. Surely God would not be so cruel as to suffer
me to fail and thereby bring all those poor people to their deaths.

Snatching the rifle from Hans, I loaded it myself; nothing must be
trusted to another. As I put on the cap a vulture made its last circle.
It hung in the air just as the others had done, and oh! its tail was
towards me. I lifted, I aimed between the gathered-up legs, I pressed
and shut my eyes, for I did not dare to look.

I heard the bullet strike, or seem to strike, and a few seconds later I
heard something else—the noise of a heavy thud upon the ground. I
looked, and there with outstretched wings lay the foul bird dead, stone
dead, eight or ten paces from the bodies.

“Allemachte! that’s better,” said Hans. “You threw stones on to _all_
the other heaps, didn’t you, baas?”

The Zulus grew excited, and the odds went down a little. The Boers
stretched out their white faces and stared at me; I saw them out of the
corner of my eye as I loaded again. Another vulture came; seeing one of
its companions on the ground, if in a somewhat unnatural attitude,
perhaps it thought that there could be nothing to fear. I leaned
against my rock, aimed, and fired, almost carelessly, so sure was I of
the result. This time I did not shut my eyes, but watched to see what
happened.

The bullet struck the bird between its thighs, raked it from end to
end, and down it came like a stone almost upon the top of its fellow.

“Good, good!” said Hans with a guttural chuckle of delight. “Now, baas,
make no mistake with the third, and ‘_als sall recht kommen_’ (all
shall be well).”

“Yes,” I answered; “_if_ I make no mistake with the third.”

I loaded the rifle again myself, being very careful to ram down the
powder well and to select a bullet that fitted perfectly true to the
bore. Moreover, I cleared the nipple with a thorn, and shook a little
fine powder into it, so as to obviate any chance of a miss-fire. Then I
set on the cap and waited. What was going on among the Boers or the
Zulus I do not know. In this last crisis of all our fates I never
looked, being too intent upon my own part in the drama.

By now the vultures appeared to have realised that something unusual
was in progress, which threatened danger to them. At any rate, although
by this time they had collected in hundreds from east, west, north, and
south, and were wheeling the heavens above in their vast, majestic
circles, none of them seemed to care to descend to prey upon the
bodies. I watched, and saw that among their number was that great king
bird which had bitten Hans in the face; it was easy to distinguish him,
because he was so much larger than the others. Also, he had some white
at the tips of his wings. I observed that certain of his company drew
near to him in the skies, where they hung together in a knot, as though
in consultation.

They separated out again, and the king began to descend, deputed
probably to spy out the land. Down he came in ever-narrowing turns,
till he reached the appointed spot for the plunge, and, according to
the immemorial custom of these birds, hung a while before he pounced
with his head to the south and his great, spreading tail towards me.

This was my chance, and, rejoicing in having so large a mark, I got the
sight upon him and pulled. The bullet thudded, some feathers floated
from his belly, showing that it had gone home, and I looked to see him
fall as the others had done. But alas! he did not fall. For a few
seconds he rocked to and fro upon his great wings, then commenced to
travel upwards in vast circles, which grew gradually more narrow, till
he appeared to be flying almost straight into the empyrean. I stared
and stared. Everybody stared, till that enormous bird became, first a
mere blot upon the blue, and at length but a speck. Then it vanished
altogether into regions far beyond the sight of man.

“Now there is an end,” I said to Hans.

“_Ja_, baas,” answered the Hottentot between his chattering teeth,
“there is an end. You did not put in enough powder. Presently we shall
all be dead.”

“Not quite,” I said with a bitter laugh. “Hans, load the rifle, load it
quick. Before they die there shall be another king in Zululand.”

“Good, good!” he exclaimed as he loaded desperately. “Let us take that
fat pig of a Dingaan with us. Shoot him in the stomach, baas; shoot him
in the stomach, so that he too may learn what it is to die slowly. Then
cut my throat, here is my big knife, and afterwards cut your own, if
you have not time to load the gun again and shoot yourself, which is
easier.”

I nodded, for it was in my mind to do these things. Never could I stand
still and see those poor Boers killed, and I knew that Marie would look
after herself.

Meanwhile, the Zulus were coming towards me, and the soldiers who had
charge of them were driving up Marais’s people, making pretence to
thrust them through with their assegais, and shouting at them as men do
at cattle. Both parties arrived in the depression at about the same
time, but remained separated by a little space. In this space lay the
corpses of the murdered men and the two dead _aasvogels_, with Hans and
myself standing opposite to them.

“Well, little Son of George,” puffed Dingaan, “you have lost your bet,
for you did but kill two vultures out of five with your magic, which
was good as far as it went, but not good enough. Now you must pay, as I
would have paid had you won.”

Then he stretched out his hand, and issued the dreadful order of
“_Bulala amalongu!_” (Kill the white people). “Kill them one by one,
that I may see whether they know how to die, all except Macumazahn and
the tall girl, whom I keep.”

Some of the soldiers made a dash and seized the Vrouw Prinsloo, who was
standing in front of the party.

“Wait a little, King,” she called out as the assegais were lifted over
her. “How do you know that the bet is lost? He whom you call Macumazahn
hit that last vulture. It should be searched for before you kill us.”

“What does the old woman say?” asked Dingaan, and Halstead translated
slowly.

“True,” said Dingaan. “Well, now I will send her to search for the
vulture in the sky. Come back thence, Fat One, and tell us if you find
it.”

The soldiers lifted their assegais, waiting the king’s word. I
pretended to look at the ground, and cocked my rifle, being determined
that if he spoke it, it should be his last. Hans stared upwards—I
suppose to avoid the sight of death—then suddenly uttered a wild yell,
which caused everyone, even the doomed people, to turn their eyes to
him. He was pointing to the heavens, and they looked to see at what he
pointed.

This was what they saw. Far, far above in that infinite sea of blue
there appeared a tiny speck, which his sharp sight had already
discerned, a speck that grew larger and larger as it descended with
terrific and ever-growing speed.

_It was the king vulture falling from the heavens—dead!_

Down it came between the Vrouw Prinsloo and the slayers, smashing the
lifted assegai of one of them and hurling him to the earth. Down it
came, and lay there a mere mass of pulp and feathers.

“O Dingaan,” I said in the midst of the intense silence that followed,
“it seems that it is I who have won the bet, not you. I killed this
king of birds, but being a king it chose to die high up and alone, that
is all.”

Dingaan hesitated, for he did not wish to spare the Boers, and I,
noting his hesitation, lifted my rifle a little. Perhaps he saw it, or
perhaps his sense of honour, as he understood the word, overcame his
wish for their blood. At any rate, he said to one of his councillors:

“Search the carcase of that vulture and see if there is a bullet hole
in it.”

The man obeyed, feeling at the mass of broken bones and flesh. By good
fortune he found, not the hole, for that was lost in the general
destruction of the tissues, but the ball itself, which, having pierced
the thick body from below upwards, had remained fast in the tough skin
just by the back-bone where the long, red neck emerges from between the
wings. He picked it out, for it was only hanging in the skin, and held
it up for all to see.

“Macumazahn has won his bet,” said Dingaan. “His magic has conquered,
though by but a very little. Macumazahn, take these Boers, they are
yours, and begone with them out of my country.”




CHAPTER XV.
RETIEF ASKS A FAVOUR


Now and again during our troubled journey through life we reach little
oases of almost perfect happiness, set jewel-like here and there in the
thorny wilderness of time. Sometimes these are hours of mere animal
content. In others they are made beautiful by waters blowing from our
spiritual springs of being, as in those rare instances when the
material veil of life seems to be rent by a mighty hand, and we feel
the presence and the comfort of God within us and about us, guiding our
footsteps to the ineffable end, which is Himself. Occasionally,
however, all these, physical satisfaction and love divine and human,
are blended to a whole, like soul and body, and we can say, “Now I know
what is joy.”

Such an hour came to me on the evening of that day of the winning of my
bet with Dingaan, when a dozen lives or so were set against my nerve
and skill. These had not failed me, although I knew that had it not
been for the inspiration of the Hottentot Hans (who sent it, I wonder?)
they would have been of no service at all. With all my thought and
experience, it had never occurred to me that the wonderful eyes of the
vultures would see the flash of the powder even through the pervading
sunlight, and swerve before the deadly bullet could reach them.

On that night I was indeed a hero in a small way. Even Henri Marais
thawed and spoke to me as a father might to his child, he who always
disliked me in secret, partly because I was an Englishman, partly
because I was everything to his daughter and he was jealous, and partly
for the reason that I stood in the path of his nephew, Hernan Pereira,
whom he either loved or feared, or both. As for the rest of them, men,
women and children, they thanked and blessed me with tears in their
eyes, vowing that, young as I was, thenceforth I and no other should be
their leader. As may be imagined, although it is true that she set down
my success to her meal of bullock’s liver and the nap which she had
insisted on my taking, the Vrouw Prinsloo was the most enthusiastic of
them all.

“Look at him,” she said, pointing with her fat finger at my
insignificant self and addressing her family. “If only I had such a
husband or a son, instead of you lumps that God has tied to me like
clogs to the heels of a she-ass, I should be happy.”

“God did that in order to prevent you from kicking, old vrouw,” said
her husband, a quiet man with a vein of sardonic humour. “If only He
had tied another clog to your tongue, I should be happy also”; whereon
the vrouw smacked his head and her children got out of the way
sniggering.

But the most blessed thing of all was my interview with Marie. All that
took place between us can best be left to the imagination, since the
talk of lovers, even in such circumstances, is not interesting to
others. Also, in a sense, it is too sacred to repeat. One sentence I
will set down, however, because in the light of after events I feel
that it was prophetic, and not spoken merely by chance. It was at the
end of our talk, as she was handing me back the pistol that I had given
her for a certain dreadful purpose.

“Three times you have saved my life, Allan—once at Maraisfontein, once
from starvation, and now from Dingaan, whose touch would have meant my
death. I wonder whether it will ever be my turn to save yours?”

She looked down for a little while, then lifted her head and laid her
hand upon my shoulder, adding slowly: “Do you know, Allan, I think that
it will at the—” and suddenly she turned and left me with her sentence
unfinished.

So thus it came about that by the help of Providence I was enabled to
rescue all these worthy folk from a miserable and a bloody death. And
yet I have often reflected since that if things had gone differently;
if, for instance, that king _aasvogel_ had found strength to carry
itself away to die at a distance instead of soaring straight upwards
like a towering partridge, as birds injured in the lungs will often
do—I suppose in search of air—it might have been better in the end.
Then I should certainly have shot Dingaan dead and every one of us
would as certainly have been killed on the spot. But if Dingaan had
died that day, Retief and his companions would never have been
massacred. Also as the peaceful Panda, his brother, would, I suppose,
have succeeded to the throne, probably the subsequent slaughter at
Weenen, and all the after fighting, would never have taken place. But
so it was fated, and who am I that I should quarrel with or even
question the decrees of fate? Doubtless these things were doomed to
happen, and they happened in due course. There is nothing more to be
said.

Early on the following morning we collected our oxen, which, although
still footsore, were now full fed and somewhat rested. An hour or two
later began our trek, word having come to us from Dingaan that we must
start at once. Also he sent us guides, under the command of the captain
Kambula, to show us the road to Natal.

I breakfasted that day with the Reverend Mr. Owen and his people, my
object being to persuade him to come away with us, as I did not
consider that Zululand was a safe place for white women and children.
My mission proved fruitless. Mrs. Hulley, the wife of the absent
interpreter, who had three little ones, Miss Owen and the servant, Jane
Williams, were all of them anxious enough to do as I suggested. But Mr.
and Mrs. Owen, who were filled with the true fervour of missionaries,
would not listen. They said that God would protect them; that they had
only been a few weeks in the country, and that it would be the act of
cowards and of traitors to fly at the very beginning of their work.
Here I may add that after the massacre of Retief they changed their
opinion, small blame to them, and fled as fast as anyone else.

I told Mr. Owen how very close I had gone to shooting Dingaan, in which
event they might all have been killed with us. This news shocked him
much. Indeed, he lectured me severely on the sins of bloodthirstiness
and a desire for revenge. So, finding that we looked at things
differently, and that it was of no use wasting breath in argument, I
wished him and his people good-bye and good fortune and went upon my
way, little guessing how we should meet again.

An hour later we trekked. Passing by the accursed hill, Hloma Amabutu,
where I saw some gorged vultures sleeping on the rocks, we came to the
gate of the Great Kraal. Here, to my surprise, I saw Dingaan with some
of his councillors and an armed guard of over a hundred men, seated
under the shade of two big milk trees. Fearing treachery, I halted the
wagons and advised the Boers to load their rifles and be ready for the
worst. A minute or so later young Thomas Halstead arrived and told me
that Dingaan wished to speak with us. I asked him if that meant that we
were to be killed. He answered, “No, you are quite safe.” The king had
received some news that had put him in a good humour with the white
people, and he desired to bid us farewell, that was all.

So we trekked boldly to where Dingaan was, and, stopping the wagons,
went up to him in a body. He greeted us kindly enough, and even gave me
his fat hand to shake.

“Macumazahn,” he said, “although it has cost me many oxen, I am glad
that your magic prevailed yesterday. Had it not done so I should have
killed all these your friends, which would have been a cause of war
between me and the Amaboona. Now, this morning I have learned that
these Amaboona are sending a friendly embassy to me under one of their
great chiefs, and I think that you will meet them on the road. I charge
you, therefore, to tell them to come on, having no fear, as I will
receive them well and listen to all they have to say.”

I answered that I would do so.

“Good,” he replied. “I am sending twelve head of cattle with you, six
of them for your food during your journey, and six as a present to the
embassy of the Amaboona. Also Kambula, my captain, has charge to see
you safely over the Tugela River.”

I thanked him and turned to go, when suddenly his eye fell upon Marie,
who, foolishly enough, took this opportunity to advance from among the
others and speak to me about something—I forget what.

“Macumazahn, is that the maiden of whom you spoke to me?” asked
Dingaan; “she whom you are going to marry?”

I answered, “Yes.”

“By the head of the Black One,” he exclaimed, “she is very fair. Will
you not make a present of her to me, Macumazahn?”

I answered, “No; she is not mine to give away.”

“Well, then, Macumazahn, I will pay you a hundred head of cattle for
her, which is the price of a royal wife, and give you ten of the
fairest girls in Zululand in exchange.”

I answered that it could not be.

Now the king began to grow angry.

“I will keep her, whether you wish it or no,” he said.

“Then you will keep her dead, O Dingaan,” I replied, “for there is more
of that magic which slew the vultures.”

Of course, I meant that Marie would be dead. But as my knowledge of the
Zulu tongue was imperfect, he understood the words to mean that _he_
would be dead, and I think they frightened him. At any rate, he said:

“Well, I promised you all safe-conduct if you won your bet, so _hamba
gachlé_ (go in peace). I wish to have no quarrel with the white folk,
but, Macumazahn, you are the first of them who has refused a gift to
Dingaan. Still, I bear you no grudge, and if you choose to come back
again, you will be welcome, for I perceive that, although so small, you
are very clever and have a will of your own; also that you mean what
you say and speak the truth. Tell the People of George that my heart is
soft towards them.” Then he turned and walked away through the gates of
the kraal.

Glad enough was I to see the last of him, for now I knew that we were
safe, except from such accidents as may overtake any travellers through
a wild country. For the present, at any rate until after he had seen
this embassy, Dingaan wished to stand well with the Boers. Therefore it
was obvious that he would never make an irreparable quarrel with them
by treacherously putting us to death as we trekked through his country.
Being sure of this, we went on our way with light hearts, thanking
Heaven for the mercies which had been shown to us.

It was on the third day of our trek, when we were drawing near to the
Tugela, that we met the Boer embassy, off-saddled by a little stream
where we proposed to outspan to rest the oxen while we ate our midday
meal. They were sleeping in the heat of the day and saw nothing of us
till we were right on to them, when, catching sight of our Zulu advance
guard, they sprang up and ran for their rifles. Then the wagons emerged
from the bush, and they stared astonished, wondering who could be
trekking in that country.

We called to them in Dutch not to be afraid and in another minute we
were among them. While we were yet some way off my eye fell upon a
burly, white-bearded man whose figure seemed to be familiar to me, and
towards him I went, taking no heed of the others, of whom there may
have been six or seven. Soon I was sure, and advancing with
outstretched hand, said:

“Good-day, Mynheer Piet Retief. Who would have thought that we who
parted so far away and so long ago would live to meet among the Zulus?”

He stared at me.

“Who is it? Who is it? Allemachte! I know now. The little Englishman,
Allan Quatermain, who shot the geese down in the Old Colony. Well, I
should not be surprised, for the man you beat in that match told me
that you were travelling in these parts. Only I understood him to say
that the Zulus had killed you.”

“If you mean Hernan Pereira,” I answered, “where did you meet him?”

“Why, down by the Tugela there, in a bad way. However, he can tell you
all about that himself, for I have brought him with me to show us the
path to Dingaan’s kraal. Where is Pereira? Send Pereira here. I want to
speak with him.”

“Here I am,” answered a sleepy voice, the hated voice of Pereira
himself, from the other side of a thick bush, where he had been
slumbering. “What is it, commandant? I come,” and he emerged,
stretching himself and yawning, just as the remainder of my party came
up. He caught sight of Henri Marais first of all, and began to greet
him, saying: “Thank God, my uncle, you are safe!”

Then his eyes fell on me, and I do not think I ever saw a man’s face
change more completely. His jaw dropped, the colour left his cheeks,
leaving them of the yellow which is common to persons of Portuguese
descent; his outstretched hand fell to his side.

“Allan Quatermain!” he ejaculated. “Why, I thought that you were dead.”

“As I should have been, Mynheer Pereira, twice over if you could have
had your way,” I replied.

“What do you mean, Allan?” broke in Retief.

“I will tell you what he means,” exclaimed the Vrouw Prinsloo, shaking
her fat fist at Pereira. “That yellow dog means that twice he has tried
to murder Allan—Allan, who saved his life and ours. Once he shot at him
in a kloof and grazed his cheek; look, there is the scar of it. And
once he plotted with the Zulus to slaughter him, telling Dingaan that
he was an evildoer and a wizard, who would bring a curse upon his
land.”

Now Retief looked at Pereira.

“What do you say to this?” he asked.

“What do I say?” repeated Pereira, recovering himself. “Why, that it is
a lie or a misunderstanding. I never shot at Heer Allan in any kloof.
Is it likely that I should have done so when he had just nursed me back
to life? I never plotted with the Zulus for his death, which would have
meant the deaths of my uncle and my cousin and of all their companions.
Am I mad that I should do such a thing?”

“Not mad, but bad,” screamed the vrouw. “I tell you, Heer Retief, it is
no lie. Ask those with me,” she added, appealing to the others, who,
with the exception of Marais, answered as with one voice:

“No; it is no lie.”

“Silence!” said the commandant. “Now, nephew Allan, tell us your
story.”

So I told him everything, of course leaving out all details. Even then
the tale was long, though it did not seem to be one that wearied my
hearers.

“Allemachte!” said Retief when I had finished, “this is a strange
story, the strangest that ever I heard. If it is true, Hernan Pereira,
you deserve to have your back set against a tree and to be shot.”

“God in heaven!” he answered, “am I to be condemned on such a tale—I,
an innocent man? Where is the evidence? This Englishman tells all this
against me for a simple reason—that he has robbed me of the love of my
cousin, to whom I was affianced. Where are his witnesses?”

“As to the shooting at me in the kloof, I have none except God who saw
you,” I answered. “As to the plot that you laid against me among the
Zulus, as it chances, however, there is one, Kambula, the captain who
was sent to take me as you had arranged, and who now commands our
escort.”

“A savage!” exclaimed Pereira. “Is the tale of a savage to be taken
against that of a white man? Also, who will translate his story? You,
Mynheer Quatermain, are the only one here who knows his tongue, if you
do know it, and you are my accuser.”

“That is true,” remarked Retief. “Such a witness should not be admitted
without a sworn interpreter. Now listen; I pass judgment as commandant
in the field. Hernan Pereira, I have known you to be a rogue in the
past, for I remember that you cheated this very young man, Allan
Quatermain, at a friendly trial of skill at which I was present; but
since then till now I have heard nothing more of you, good or bad.
To-day this Allan Quatermain and a number of my own countrymen bring
grave charges against you, which, however, at present are not capable
of proof or disproof. Well, I cannot decide those charges, whatever my
own opinion may be. I think that you had better go back with your
uncle, Henri Marais, to the trek-Boers, where they can be laid before a
court and settled according to law.”

“If so, he will go back alone,” said the Vrouw Prinsloo. “He will not
go back with us, for we will elect a field-cornet and shoot him—the
stinkcat, who left us to starve and afterwards tried to kill little
Allan Quatermain, who saved our lives”; and the chorus behind her
echoed:

“_Ja, ja_, we will shoot him.”

“Hernan Pereira,” said Retief, rubbing his broad forehead, “I don’t
quite know why it is, but no one seems to want you as a companion.
Indeed, to speak truth, I don’t myself. Still, I think you would be
safer with me than with these others whom you seem to have offended.
Therefore, I suggest that you come on with us. But listen here, man,”
he added sternly, “if I find you plotting against us among the Zulus,
that hour you are dead. Do you understand?”

“I understand that I am one slandered,” replied Pereira. “Still, it is
Christian to submit to injuries, and therefore I will do as you wish.
As to these bearers of false witness, I leave them to God.”

“And I leave you to the devil,” shouted Vrouw Prinsloo, “who will
certainly have you soon or late. Get out of my sight, stinkcat, or I
will pull your hair off.” And she rushed at him, flapping her dreadful
_vatdoek_—which she produced from some recess in her raiment—in his
face, driving him away as though he were a noxious insect.

Well, he went I know not where, and so strong was public opinion
against him that I do not think that even his uncle, Henri Marais,
sought him out to console him.

When Pereira was gone, our party and that of Retief fell into talk, and
we had much to tell. Especially was the commandant interested in the
story of my bet with Dingaan, whereby I saved the lives of all my
companions by shooting the vultures.

“It was not for nothing, nephew, that God Almighty gave you the power
of holding a gun so straight,” said Retief to me when he understood the
matter. “I remember that when you killed those wildfowl in the Groote
Kloof with bullets, which no other man could have done, I wondered why
you should have such a gift above all the rest of us, who have
practised for so many more years. Well, now I understand. God Almighty
is no fool; He knows His business. I wish you were coming back with me
to Dingaan; but as that tainted man, Hernan Pereira, is of my company,
perhaps it is better that you should stay away. Tell me, now, about
this Dingaan; does he mean to kill us?”

“Not this time, I think, uncle,” I answered; “because first he wishes
to learn all about the Boers. Still, do not trust him too far just
because he speaks you softly. Remember, that if I had missed the third
vulture, we should all have been dead by now. And, if you are wise,
keep an eye upon Hernan Pereira.”

“These things I will do, nephew, especially the last of them; and now
we must be getting on. Stay; come here, Henri Marais; I have a word to
say to you. I understand that this little Englishman, Allan Quatermain,
who is worth ten bigger men, loves your daughter, whose life he has
saved again and again, and that she loves him. Why, then, do you not
let them marry in a decent fashion?”

“Because before God I have sworn her to another man—to my nephew,
Hernan Pereira, whom everyone slanders,” answered Marais sulkily.
“Until she is of age that oath holds.”

“Oho!” said Retief, “you have sworn your lamb to that hyena, have you?
Well, look out that he does not crack your bones as well as hers, and
perhaps some others also. Why does God give some men a worm in their
brains, as He does to the _wildebeeste_, a worm that always makes them
run the wrong way? I don’t know, I am sure; but you who are very
religious, Henri Marais, might think the matter over and tell me the
answer when next we meet. Well, this girl of yours will soon be of age,
and then, as I am commandant down yonder where she is going, I’ll see
she marries the man she wants, whatever you say, Henri Marais. Heaven
above us! I only wish it were my daughter he was in love with. A fellow
who can shoot to such good purpose might have the lot of them”; and
uttering one of his great, hearty laughs, he walked off to his horse.

On the morrow of this meeting we forded the Tugela and entered the
territory that is now called Natal. Two days’ short trekking through a
beautiful country brought us to some hills that I think were called
Pakadi, or else a chief named Pakadi lived there, I forget which.
Crossing these hills, on the further side of them, as Retief had told
us we should do, we found a large party of the trek-Boers, who were
already occupying this land on the hither side of the Bushman’s River,
little knowing, poor people, that it was fated to become the grave of
many of them. To-day, and for all future time, that district is and
will be known by the name of Weenen, or the Place of Weeping, because
of those pioneers who here were massacred by Dingaan within a few weeks
of the time of which I write.

Nice as the land was, for some reason or other it did not quite suit my
fancy, and therefore, in view of my approaching marriage with Marie,
having purchased a horse from one of the trek-Boers, I began to explore
the country round. My object was to find a stretch of fertile veld
where we could settle when we were wedded, and such a spot I discovered
after some trouble. It lay about thirty miles away to the east, in the
loop of a beautiful stream that is now known as the Mooi River.

Enclosed in this loop were some thirty thousand acres of very rich,
low-lying soil, almost treeless and clothed with luxuriant grasses
where game was extraordinarily numerous. At the head of it rose a
flat-topped hill, from the crest of which, oddly enough, flowed a
plentiful stream of water fed by a strong spring. Half-way down this
hill, facing to the east, and irrigable by the stream, was a plateau
several acres in extent, which furnished about the best site for a
house that I know in all South Africa. Here I determined we would build
our dwelling-place and become rich by the breeding up of great herds of
cattle. I should explain that this ground, which once, as the remains
of their old kraals showed, had belonged to a Kaffir tribe killed out
by Chaka, the Zulu king, was to be had for the taking.

Indeed, as there was more land than we could possibly occupy, I
persuaded Henri Marais, the Prinsloos and the Meyers, with whom I had
trekked from Delagoa, to visit it with me. When they had seen it they
agreed to make it their home in the future, but meanwhile elected to
return to the other Boers for safety’s sake. So with the help of some
Kaffirs, of whom there were a few in the district, remnants of those
tribes which Chaka had destroyed, I pegged out an estate of about
twelve thousand acres for myself, and, selecting a site, set the
natives to work to build a rough mud house upon it which would serve as
a temporary dwelling. I should add that the Prinsloos and the Meyers
also made arrangements for the building of similar shelters almost
alongside of my own. This done, I returned to Marie and the trek-Boers.

On the morning after my return to the camp Piet Retief appeared there
with his five or six companions. I asked him how he had got on with
Dingaan.

“Well enough, nephew,” he answered. “At first the king was somewhat
angry, saying that we Boers had stolen six hundred head of his cattle.
But I showed him that it was the chief, Sikonyela, who lives yonder on
the Caledon River, who had dressed up his people in white men’s clothes
and put them upon horses, and afterwards drove the cattle through one
of our camps to make it appear that we were the thieves. Then he asked
me what was my object in visiting him. I answered that I sought a grant
of the land south of the Tugela to the sea.

“‘Bring me back the cattle that you say Sikonyela has stolen,’ he said,
‘and we will talk about this land.’ To this I agreed and soon after
left the kraal.”

“What did you do with Hernan Pereira, uncle?” I asked.

“This, Allan. When I was at Umgungundhlovu I sought out the truth of
that story you told me as to his having made a plot to get you killed
by the Zulus on the ground that you were a wizard.”

“And what did you discover, uncle?”

“I discovered that it was true, for Dingaan told me so himself. Then I
sent for Pereira and ordered him out of my camp, telling him that if he
came back among the Boers I would have him put on his trial for
attempted murder. He said nothing, but went away.”

“Whither did he go?”

“To a place that Dingaan gave him just outside his kraal. The king said
that he would be useful to him, as he could mend guns and teach his
soldiers to shoot with them. So there, I suppose, he remains, unless he
has thought it wiser to make off. At any rate, I am sure that he will
not come here to trouble you or anyone.”

“No, uncle, but he may trouble you _there_,” I said doubtfully.

“What do you mean, Allan?”

“I don’t quite know, but he is black-hearted, a traitor by nature, and
in one way or the other he will stir up sorrow. Do you think that he
will love you, for instance, after you have hunted him out like a
thief?”

Retief shrugged his shoulders and laughed as he answered:

“I will take my chance of that. What is the use of troubling one’s head
about such a snake of a man? And now, Allan, I have something to ask
you. Are you married yet?”

“No, uncle, nor can be for another five weeks, when Marie comes of age.
Her father still holds that his oath binds him, and I have promised
that I will not take her till then.”

“Does he indeed, Allan? I think that Henri Marais is ‘_kransick_’ (that
is, cracked), or else his cursed nephew, Hernan, has fascinated him, as
a snake does a bird. Still, I suppose that he has the law on his side,
and, as I am commandant, I cannot advise anyone to break the law. Now
listen. It is no use your staying here looking at the ripe peach you
may not pluck, for that only makes the stomach sick. Therefore the best
thing that you can do is to come with me to get those cattle from
Sikonyela, for I shall be very glad of your company. Afterwards, too, I
want you to return with me to Zululand when I go for the grant of all
this country.”

“But how about my getting married?” I asked in dismay.

“Oh! I dare say you will be able to marry before we start. Or if not,
it must be when we return. Listen now; do not disappoint me in this
matter, Allan. None of us can speak Zulu except you, who takes to these
savage languages like a duck to water, and I want you to be my
interpreter with Dingaan. Also the king specially asked that you should
come with me when I brought the cattle, as he seems to have taken a
great fancy to you. He said that you would render his words honestly,
but that he did not trust the lad whom he has there to translate into
Dutch and English. So you see it will help me very much in this big
business if you come with me.”

Still I hesitated, for some fear of the future lay heavy on my heart,
warning me against this expedition.

“Allemachte!” said Retief angrily, “if you will not grant me a favour,
let it be. Or is it that you want reward? If so, all I can promise you
is twenty thousand acres of the best land in the country when we get
it.”

“No, Mynheer Retief,” I replied; “it is no question of reward; and as
for the land, I have already pegged out my farm on a river about thirty
miles to the east. It is that I do not like to leave Marie alone,
fearing lest her father should play some trick on me as regards her and
Hernan Pereira.”

“Oh, if that is all you are afraid of, Allan, I can soon settle
matters; for I will give orders to the prédicant Celliers that he is
not to marry Marie Marais to anyone except yourself, even if she asks
him. Also I will order that if Hernan Pereira should come to the camp,
he is to be shut up until I return to try him. Lastly, as commandant, I
will name Henri Marais as one of those who are to accompany us, so that
he will be able to plot nothing against you. Now are you satisfied?”

I said “Yes” as cheerfully as I could, though I felt anything but
cheerful, and we parted, for, of course, the Commandant Retief had much
to occupy him.

Then I went and told Marie what I had promised. Somewhat to my surprise
she said that she thought I had acted wisely.

“If you stayed here,” she added, “perhaps some new quarrel would arise
between you and my father which might make bitterness afterwards. Also,
dear, it would be foolish for you to offend the Commandant Retief, who
will be the great man in this country, and who is very fond of you.
After all, Allan, we shall only be separated for a little while, and
when that is done we have the rest of our lives to spend together. As
for me, do not be afraid, for you know I will never marry anyone but
you—no, not to save myself from death.”

So I left her somewhat comforted, knowing how sound was her judgment,
and went off to make my preparations for the expedition to Sikonyela’s
country.

All this conversation with Retief I have set down in full, as nearly as
I can remember it, because of its fateful consequences. Ah! if I could
have foreseen; if only I could have foreseen!




CHAPTER XVI.
THE COUNCIL


Two days later we started to recover Dingaan’s cattle, sixty or seventy
of us, all well armed and mounted. With us went two of Dingaan’s
captains and a number of Zulus, perhaps a hundred, who were to drive
the cattle if we recovered them. As I could speak their language I was
more or less in command of this Zulu contingent, and managed to make
myself very useful in that capacity. Also, during the month or so of
our absence, by continually conversing with them, I perfected myself
considerably in my knowledge of their beautiful but difficult tongue.

Now it is not my intention to write down the details of this
expedition, during which there was no fighting and nothing serious
happened. We arrived in due course at Sikonyela’s and stated our
errand. When he saw how numerous and well armed we were, and that
behind us was all the might of the Zulu army, that wily old rascal
thought it well to surrender the stolen cattle without further to-do,
and with these some horses which he had lifted from the Boers. So,
having received them, we delivered them over to the Zulu captains, with
instructions to drive them carefully to Umgungundhlovu. The commandant
sent a message by these men to the effect that, having fulfilled his
part of the compact, he would wait upon Dingaan as soon as possible in
order to conclude the treaty about the land.

This business finished, Retief took me and a number of the Boers to
visit other bodies of the emigrant Dutch who were beyond the
Drakensberg, in what is now the Transvaal territory. This occupied a
long time, as these Boers were widely scattered, and at each camp we
had to stop for several days while Retief explained everything to its
leaders. Also he arranged with them to come down into Natal, so as to
be ready to people it as soon as he received the formal cession of the
country from Dingaan. Indeed, most of them began to trek at once,
although jealousies between the various commandants caused some of the
bands, luckily for themselves, to remain on the farther side of the
mountains.

At length, everything being settled, we rode away, and reached the
Bushman’s River camp on a certain Saturday afternoon. Here, to my joy,
we found all well. Nothing had been heard of Hernan Pereira, while the
Zulus, if we might judge from messengers who came to us, seemed to be
friendly. Marie, also, had now quite recovered from the fears and
hardships which she had undergone. Never had I seen her look so sweet
and beautiful as she did when she greeted me, arrayed no longer in
rags, but in a simple yet charming dress made of some stuff that she
had managed to buy from a trader who came up to the camp from Durban.
Moreover, I think that there was another reason for the change, since
the light of dawning happiness shone in her deep eyes.

The day, as I have said, was Saturday, and on the Monday she would come
of age and be free to dispose of herself in marriage, for on that day
lapsed the promise which we had given to her father. But, alas! by a
cursed perversity of fate, on this very Monday at noon the Commandant
Retief had arranged to ride into Zululand on his second visit to
Dingaan, and with Retief I was in honour bound to go.

“Marie,” I said, “will not your father soften towards us and let us be
married to-morrow, so that we may have a few hours together before we
part?”

“I do not know, my dear,” she answered, blushing, “since about this
matter he is very strange and obstinate. Do you know that all the time
you were absent he never mentioned your name, and if anyone else spoke
it he would get up and go away!”

“That’s bad,” I said. “Still, if you are willing, we might try.”

“Indeed and indeed, Allan, I am willing, who am sick of being so near
to you and yet so far. But how shall we do so?”

“I think that we will ask the Commandant Retief and the Vrouw Prinsloo
to plead for us, Marie. Let us go to seek them.”

She nodded, and hand in hand we walked through the Boers, who nudged
each other and laughed at us as we passed to where the old vrouw was
seated on a stool by her wagon drinking coffee. I remember that her
_vatdoek_ was spread over her knees, for she also had a new dress,
which she was afraid of staining.

“Well, my dears,” she said in her loud voice, “are you married already
that you hang so close together?”

“No, my aunt,” I answered; “but we want to be, and have come to you to
help us.”

“That I will do with all my heart, though to speak truth, young people,
at your age, as things are, I should have been inclined to help myself,
as I have told you before. Heaven above us! what is it that makes
marriage in the sight of God? It is that male and female should declare
themselves man and wife before all folk, and live as such. The pastor
and his mumblings are very well if you can get them, but it is the
giving of the hand, not the setting of the ring upon it; it is the
vowing of two true hearts, and not words read out of a book, that make
marriage. Still, this is bold talk, for which any reverend prédicant
would reprove me, for if young folk acted on it, although the tie might
hold good in law, what would become of his fee? Come, let us seek the
commandant and hear what he has to say. Allan, pull me up off this
stool, where, if I had my way, after so much travelling, I should like
to sit while a house was built over my head and for the rest of my
life.”

I obeyed, not without difficulty, and we went to find Retief.

At the moment he was standing alone, watching two wagons that had just
trekked away. These contained his wife with other members of his
family, and some friends whom he was sending, under the charge of the
Heer Smit, to a place called Doornkop, that lay at a distance of
fifteen miles or more. At this Doornkop he had already caused a rough
house, or rather shed, to be built for the Vrouw Retief’s occupation,
thinking that she would be more comfortable and perhaps safer there
during his absence than at the crowded camp in a wagon.

“Allemachte! Allan,” he said, catching sight of me, “my heart is sore;
I do not know why. I tell you that when I kissed my old woman good-bye
just now I felt as though I should never see her again, and the tears
came into my eyes. I wish we were all safe back from Dingaan. But
there, there, I will try to get over to see her to-morrow, as we don’t
start till Monday. What is it that you want, Allan, with that ‘_mooi
mesje_’ of yours?”—and he pointed to the tall Marie.

“What would any man want with such a one, save to marry her?” broke in
the Vrouw Prinsloo. “Now, commandant, listen while I set out the tale.”

“All right, aunt, only be brief, for I have no time to spare.”

She obeyed, but I cannot say that she was brief.

When at last the old lady paused, breathless, Retief said:

“I understand everything; there is no need for you young people to
talk. Now we will go and see Henri Marais, and, if he is not madder
than usual, make him listen to reason.”

So we walked to where Marais’s wagon stood at the end of the line, and
found him sitting on the _disselboom_ cutting up tobacco with his
pocket-knife.

“Good-day, Allan,” he said, for we had not met since my return. “Have
you had a nice journey?”

I was about to answer when the commandant broke in impatiently:

“See here, see here, Henri, we have not come to talk about Allan’s
journey, but about his marriage, which is more important. He rides with
me to Zululand on Monday, as you do, and wants to wed your daughter
to-morrow, which is Sunday, a good day for the deed.”

“It is a day to pray, not to give and be given in marriage,” commented
Marais sulkily. “Moreover, Marie does not come of age before Monday,
and until then the oath that I made to God holds.”

“My _vatdoek_ for your oath!” exclaimed the vrouw, flapping that awful
rag in his face. “How much do you suppose that God cares what you in
your folly swore to that stinkcat of a nephew of yours? Do you be
careful, Henri Marais, that God does not make of your precious oath a
stone to fall upon your head and break it like a peanut-shell.”

“Hold your chattering tongue, old woman,” said Marais furiously. “Am I
to be taught my duty to my conscience and my daughter by you?”

“Certainly you are, if you cannot teach them to yourself,” began the
vrouw, setting her hands upon her hips.

But Retief pushed her aside, saying:

“No quarrelling here. Now, Henri Marais, your conduct about these two
young people who love each other is a scandal. Will you let them be
married to-morrow or not?”

“No, commandant, I will not. By the law I have power over my daughter
till she is of age, and I refuse to allow her to marry a cursed
Englishman. Moreover, the prédicant Celliers is away, so there is none
to marry them.”

“You speak strange words, Mynheer Marais,” said Retief quietly,
“especially when I remember all that this ‘cursed Englishman’ has done
for you and yours, for I have heard every bit of that story, though not
from him. Now hearken. You have appealed to the law, and, as
commandant, I must allow your appeal. But after twelve o’clock
to-morrow night, according to your own showing, the law ceases to bind
your daughter. Therefore, on Monday morning, if there is no clergyman
in the camp and these two wish it, I, as commandant, will marry them
before all men, as I have the power to do.”

Then Marais broke into one of those raving fits of temper which were
constitutional in him, and to my mind showed that he was never quite
sane. Oddly enough, it was on poor Marie that he concentrated his
wrath. He cursed her horribly because she had withstood his will and
refused to marry Hernan Pereira. He prayed that evil might fall on her;
that she might never bear a child, and that if she did, it might die,
and other things too unpleasant to mention.

We stared at him astonished, though I think that had he been any other
man than the father of my betrothed, I should have struck him. Retief,
I noticed, lifted his hand to do so, then let it fall again, muttering:
“Let be; he is possessed with a devil.”

At last Marais ceased, not, I think, from lack of words, but because he
was exhausted, and stood before us, his tall form quivering, and his
thin, nervous face working like that of a person in convulsions. Then
Marie, who had dropped her head beneath this storm, lifted it, and I
saw that her deep eyes were all ablaze and that she was very white.

“You are my father,” she said in a low voice, “and therefore I must
submit to whatever you choose to say to me. Moreover, I think it likely
that the evil which you call down will fall upon me, since Satan is
always at hand to fulfil his own wishes. But if so, my father, I am
sure that this evil will recoil upon your own head, not only here, but
hereafter. There justice will be done to both of us, perhaps before
very long, and also to your nephew, Hernan Pereira.”

Marais made no answer; his rage seemed to have spent itself. He only
sat himself again upon the _disselboom_ of the wagon and went on
cutting up the tobacco viciously, as though he were slicing the heart
of a foe. Even the Vrouw Prinsloo was silent and stared at him whilst
she fanned herself with the _vatdoek_. But Retief spoke.

“I wonder if you are mad, or only wicked, Henri Marais,” he said. “To
curse your own sweet girl like this you must be one or the other—a
single child who has always been good to you. Well, as you are to ride
with me on Monday, I pray that you will keep your temper under control,
lest it should bring us into trouble, and you also. As for you, Marie,
my dear, do not fret because a wild beast has tried to toss you with
his horns, although he happens to be your father. On Monday morning you
pass out of his power into your own, and on that day I will marry you
to Allan Quatermain here. Meanwhile, I think you are safest away from
this father of yours, who might take to cutting your throat instead of
that tobacco. Vrouw Prinsloo, be so good as to look after Marie Marais,
and on Monday morning next bring her before me to be wed. Until then,
Henri Marais, I, as commandant, shall set a guard over you, with orders
to seize you if it should be necessary. Now I advise you to take a
walk, and when you are calm again, to pray God to forgive you your
wicked words, lest they should be fulfilled and drag you down to
judgment.”

Then we all went, leaving Henri Marais still cutting up his tobacco on
the _disselboom_.

On the Sunday I met Marais walking about the camp, followed by the
guard whom Retief had set over him. To my surprise he greeted me almost
with affection.

“Allan,” he said, “you must not misunderstand me. I do not really wish
ill to Marie, whom I love more dearly than I do my life; God alone
knows how much I love her. But I made a promise to her cousin, Hernan,
my only sister’s only child, and you will understand that I cannot
break that promise, although Hernan has disappointed me in many
ways—yes, in many ways. But if he is bad, as they say, it comes with
that Portuguese blood, which is a misfortune that he cannot help, does
it not? However bad he may be, as an honest man I am bound to keep my
promise, am I not? Also, Allan, you must remember that you are English,
and although you may be a good fellow in yourself, that is a fault
which you cannot expect me to forgive. Still, if it is fated that you
should marry my daughter and breed English children—Heaven above! to
think of it, English children!—well, there is nothing more to be said.
Don’t remember the words I spoke to Marie. Indeed, I can’t remember
them myself. When I grow angry, a kind of rush of blood comes into my
brain, and then I forget what I have said,” and he stretched out his
hand to me.

I shook it and answered that I understood he was not himself when he
spoke those dreadful words, which both Marie and I wished to forget.

“I hope you will come to our wedding to-morrow,” I added, “and wipe
them out with a father’s blessing.”

“To-morrow! Are you really going to be married to-morrow?” he
exclaimed, his sallow face twitching nervously. “O God, it was another
man that I dreamed to see standing by Marie’s side. But he is not here;
he has disgraced and deserted me. Well, I will come, if my gaolers will
suffer it. Good-bye, you happy bridegroom of to-morrow, good-bye.”

Then he swung round and departed, followed by the guards, one of whom
touched his brow and shook his head significantly as he passed me.

I think that Sunday seemed the longest day I ever spent. The Vrouw
Prinsloo would scarcely allow me even a glimpse of Marie, because of
some fad she had got into her mind that it was either not proper or not
fortunate, I forget which, that a bride and bridegroom should associate
on the eve of their marriage. So I occupied myself as best I could.
First I wrote a long letter to my father, the third that I had sent,
telling him everything that was going to happen, and saying how grieved
I was that he could not be present to marry us and give us his
blessing.

This letter I gave to a trader who was trekking to the bay on the
following morning, begging him to forward it by the first opportunity.

That duty done, I saw about the horses which I was taking into
Zululand, three of them, two for myself and one for Hans, who
accompanied me as after-rider. Also the saddlery, saddle-bags, guns and
ammunition must be overhauled, all of which took some time.

“You are going to spend a strange _wittebroodsweek_ [white-bread-week,
or, in other words, honeymoon], baas,” said Hans, squinting at me with
his little eyes, as he brayed away at a buckskin which was to serve as
a saddle-cloth. “Now, if _I_ was to be married to-morrow, I should stop
with my pretty for a few days, and only ride off somewhere else when I
was tired of her, especially if that somewhere else chanced to be
Zululand, where they are so fond of killing people.”

“I dare say you would, Hans; and so would I, if I could, you be sure.
But, you see, the commandant wants me to interpret, and therefore it is
my duty to go with him.”

“Duty; what is duty, baas? Love I understand. It is for love of you
that I go with you; also for fear lest you should cause me to be beaten
if I refused. Otherwise I would certainly stop here in the camp, where
there is plenty to eat and little work to do, as, were I you, I should
do also for love of that white missie. But duty—pah! that is a
fool-word, which makes bones of a man before his time and leaves his
girl to others.”

“Of course, you do not understand, Hans, any more than you coloured
people understand what gratitude is. But what do you mean about this
trek of ours? Are you afraid?”

He shrugged his shoulders. “A little, perhaps, baas. At least, I should
be if I thought about the morrow, which I don’t, since to-day is enough
for me, and thinking about what one can’t know makes the head ache.
Dingaan is not a nice man, baas; we saw that, didn’t we? He is a hunter
who knows how to set a trap. Also he has the Baas Pereira up there to
help him. So perhaps you might be more comfortable here kissing Missie
Marie. Why do you not say that you have hurt your leg and cannot run?
It would not be much trouble to walk about on a crutch for a day or
two, and when the commandant was well gone, your leg might heal and you
could throw the stick away.”

“Get thee behind me, Satan,” I muttered to myself, and was about to
give Hans a piece of my mind when I recollected that the poor fellow
had his own way of looking at things and could not be blamed. Also, as
he said, he loved me, and only suggested what he thought would tend to
my joy and safety. How could I suppose that he would be interested in
the success of a diplomatic mission to Dingaan, or think anything about
it except that it was a risky business? So I only said:

“Hans, if you are afraid, you had better stop behind. I can easily find
another after-rider.”

“Is the baas angry with me that he should speak so?” asked the
Hottentot. “Have I not always been true to him; and if I should be
killed, what does it matter? Have I not said that I do not think about
to-morrow, and we must all go to sleep sometime? No; unless the baas
beats me back, I shall come with him. But, baas”—this in a wheedling
tone—“you might give me some brandy to drink your health in to-night.
It is very good to get drunk when one has to be sober, and perhaps
dead, for a long time afterwards. It would be nice to remember when one
is a spook, or an angel with white wings, such as the old baas, your
father, used to tell us about in school on the Sabbath.”

At this point, finding Hans hopeless, I got up and walked away, leaving
him to finish our preparations.

That evening there was a prayer-meeting in the camp, for although no
pastor was present, one of the Boer elders took his place and offered
up supplications which, if simple and even absurd in their wording, at
least were hearty enough. Amongst other requests, I remember that he
petitioned for the safety of those who were to go on the mission to
Dingaan and of those who were to remain behind. Alas! those prayers
were not heard, for it pleased the Power to Whom they were addressed to
decree otherwise.

After this meeting, in which I took an earnest share, Retief who just
before it began had ridden in from Doornkop, whither he had been to
visit his wife, held a kind of council, whereat the names of those who
had volunteered or been ordered to accompany him, were finally taken
down. At this council there was a good deal of discussion, since many
of the Boers did not think the expedition wise—at any rate, if it was
to be carried out on so large a scale. One of them, I forget which, an
old man, pointed out that it might look like a war party, and that it
would be wiser if only five or six went, as they had done before, since
then there could be no mistake as to the peaceful nature of their
intentions.

Retief himself combated this view, and at last turned suddenly to me,
who was listening near by, and said:

“Allan Quatermain, you are young, but you have a good judgment; also,
you are one of the very few who know Dingaan and can speak his
language. Tell us now, what do you think?”

Thus adjured, I answered, perhaps moved thereto more than I thought by
Hans’s talk, that I, too, considered the thing dangerous, and that
someone whose life was less valuable than the commandant’s should go in
command.

“Why do you say so, nephew,” he said irritably, “seeing that all white
men’s lives are of equal value, and I can smell no danger in the
business?”

“Because, commandant, I do smell danger, though what danger I cannot
say, any more than a dog or a buck can when it sniffs something in the
air and barks or runs. Dingaan is a tamed tiger just now, but tigers
are not house cats that one can play with them, as I know, who have
felt his claws and just, only just, come out from between them.”

“What do you mean, nephew?” asked Retief in his direct fashion. “Do you
believe that this _swartzel_” (that is, black creature) “means to kill
us?”

“I believe that it is quite possible,” I answered.

“Then, nephew, being a reasonable man as you are, you must have some
ground for your belief. Come now, out with it.”

“I have none, commandant, except that one who can set the lives of a
dozen folk against a man’s skill in shooting at birds on the wing, and
who can kill people to be a bait for those birds, is capable of
anything. Moreover, he told me that he did not love you Boers, and why
should he?”

Now, all those who were standing about seemed to be impressed with this
argument. At any rate, they turned towards Retief, anxiously waiting
for his reply.

“Doubtless,” answered the commandant, who, as I have said, was
irritable that night, “doubtless those English missionaries have
poisoned the king’s mind against us Boers. Also,” he added
suspiciously, “I think you told me, Allan, that the king said he liked
you and meant to spare you, even if he killed your companions, just
because you also are English. Are you sure that you do not know more
than you choose to tell us? Has Dingaan perhaps confided something to
you—just because you are English?”

Then noting that these words moved the assembled Boers, in whom race
prejudice and recent events had created a deep distrust of any born of
British blood, I grew very angry and answered:

“Commandant, Dingaan confided nothing to me, except that some Kaffir
witch-doctor, who is named Zikali, a man I never saw, had told him that
he must not kill an Englishman, and therefore he wished to spare me,
although one of your people, Hernan Pereira, had whispered to him that
I ought to be killed. Yet I say outright that I think you are foolish
to visit this king with so large a force. Still, I am ready to do so
myself with one or two others. Let me go, then, and try to persuade him
to sign this treaty as to the land. If I am killed or fail, you can
follow after me and do better.”

“Allemachte!” exclaimed Retief; “that is a fair offer. But how do I
know, nephew, that when we came to read the treaty we should not find
that it granted all the land to you English and not to us Boers? No,
no, don’t look angry. That was not a right thing to say, for you are
honest whatever most of your blood may be. Nephew Allan, you who are a
brave man, are afraid of this journey. Now, why is that, I wonder? Ah!
I have it. I had forgotten. You are to be married to-morrow morning to
a very pretty girl, and it is not natural that you should wish to spend
the next fortnight in Zululand. Don’t you see, brothers, he wants to
get out of it because he is going to be married, as it is natural that
he should, and therefore he tries to frighten us all? When we were
going to be married, should we have wished to ride away at once to
visit some stinking savage? Ach! I am glad I thought of that just as I
was beginning to turn his gloomy colour, like a chameleon on a black
hat, for it explains everything,” and he struck his thigh with his big
hand and burst into a roar of laughter.

All the company of Boers who stood around began to laugh also,
uproariously, for this primitive joke appealed to them. Moreover, their
nerves were strained; they also dreaded this expedition, and therefore
they were glad to relieve themselves in bucolic merriment. Everything
was clear to them now. Feeling myself in honour bound to go on the
embassy, as I was their only interpreter, I, artful dog, was trying to
play upon their fears in order to prevent it from starting, so that I
might have a week or two of the company of my new-wed wife. They saw
and appreciated the joke.

“He’s slim, this little Englishman,” shouted one.

“Don’t be angry with him. We should have done as much ourselves,”
replied another.

“Leave him behind,” said a third. “Even the Zulus do not send a
new-married man on service.” Then they smacked me on the back, and
hustled me in their rude, kindly manner, till at length I fell into a
rage and hit one of them on the nose, at which he only laughed the
louder, although I made it bleed.

“See here, friends,” I said, as soon as silence was restored; “married
or no, whoever does not ride to Dingaan, I ride to him, although it is
against my judgment. Let those laugh loudest who laugh last.”

“Good!” cried one; “if you set the pace we shall soon be home again,
Allan Quatermain. Who would not with Marie Marais at the end of the
journey?”

Then, followed by their rough and mocking laughter, I broke away from
them, and took refuge in my wagon, little guessing that all this talk
would be brought up against me on a day to come.

In a certain class of uneducated mind foresight is often interpreted as
guilty knowledge.




CHAPTER XVII.
THE MARRIAGE


I was awakened on my wedding morning by the crash and bellowing of a
great thunderstorm. The lightning flashed fearfully all about us,
killing two oxen quite near to my wagon, and the thunder rolled and
echoed till the very earth seemed to shake. Then came a wail of cold
wind, and after that the swish of torrential rain. Although I was well
accustomed to such natural manifestations, especially at this season of
the year, I confess that these sights and sounds did not tend to raise
my spirits, which were already lower than they should have been on that
eventful day. Hans, however, who arrived to help me put on my best
clothes for the ceremony, was for once consoling.

“Don’t look sick, baas,” he said, “for if there is storm in the
morning, there is shine at night.”

“Yes,” I answered, speaking more to myself than to him, “but what will
happen between the storm of the morning and the peace of the night?”

It was arranged that the commission, which, counting the native
after-riders, consisted of over a hundred people, among them several
boys, who were little more than children, was to ride at one hour
before noon. Nobody could get about to make the necessary preparations
until the heavy rain had passed away, which it did a little after eight
o’clock. Therefore when I left the wagon to eat, or try to eat some
breakfast, I found the whole camp in a state of bustle.

Boers were shouting to their servants, horses were being examined,
women were packing the saddle-bags of their husbands and fathers with
spare clothes, the pack-beasts were being laden with biltong and other
provisions, and so forth.

In the midst of all this tumult I began to wonder whether my private
business would not be forgotten, since it seemed unlikely that time
could be found for marriages. However, about ten o’clock when, having
done everything that I had to do, I was sitting disconsolately upon my
wagon box, being too shy to mix with that crowd of busy mockers or to
go to the Prinsloos’ camp to make inquiries, the vrouw herself
appeared.

“Come on, Allan,” she said, “the commandant is waiting and swearing
because you are not there. Also, there is another waiting, and oh! she
looks lovely. When they see her, every man in the camp will want her
for himself, whether he has got a wife or not, for in that matter,
although you mayn’t think so just now, they are all the same as the
Kaffirs. Oh! I know them, I know them, a white skin makes no
difference.”

While she held forth thus in her usual outspoken fashion, the vrouw was
dragging me along by the hand, just as though I were a naughty little
boy. Nor could I get free from that mighty grip, or, when once her
great bulk was in motion, match my weight against it. Of course, some
of the younger Boers, who, knowing her errand, had followed her, set up
a shout of cheers and laughter, which attracted everybody to the
procession.

“It is too late to hang back now, Englishman.” “You must make the best
of a bad business.” “If you wanted to change your mind, you should have
done it before,” men and women roared and screamed with many other such
bantering words, till at length I felt myself turn the colour of a red
vlei lily.

So we came at last to where Marie stood, the centre of an admiring
circle. She was clothed in a soft white gown made of some simple but
becoming stuff, and she wore upon her dark hair a wreath woven by the
other maidens in the camp, a bevy of whom stood behind her.

Now we were face to face. Our eyes met, and oh! hers were full of love
and trust. They dazzled and bewildered me. Feeling that I ought to
speak, and not knowing what to say, I merely stammered “Good morning,”
whereon everyone broke into a roar of laughter, except Vrouw Prinsloo,
who exclaimed:

“Did any one ever see such a fool?” and even Marie smiled.

Then Piet Retief appeared from somewhere dressed in tall boots and
rough riding clothes, such as the Boers wore in those days. Handing the
_roer_ he was carrying to one of his sons, after much fumbling he
produced a book from his pocket, in which the place was marked with a
piece of grass.

“Now then,” he said, “be silent, all, and show respect, for remember I
am not a man just now. I am a parson, which is quite a different thing,
and, being a commandant and a veld cornet and other officers all rolled
into one, by virtue of the law I am about to marry these young people,
so help me God. Don’t any of you witnesses ever say afterwards that
they are not rightly and soundly married, because I tell you that they
are, or will be.” He paused for breath, and someone said, “Hear, hear,”
or its Dutch equivalent, whereon, having glared the offender into
silence, Retief proceeded:

“Young man and young woman, what are your names?”

“Don’t ask silly questions, commandant,” broke in Vrouw Prinsloo; “you
know their names well enough.”

“Of course I do, aunt,” he answered; “but for this purpose I must
pretend not to know them. Are you better acquainted with the law than I
am? But stay, where is the father, Henri Marais?”

Someone thrust Marais forward, and there he stood quite silent, staring
at us with a queer look upon his face and his gun in his hand, for he,
too, was ready to ride.

“Take away that gun,” said Retief; “it might go off and cause
disturbance or perhaps accidents,” and somebody obeyed. “Now, Henri
Marais, do you give your daughter to be married to this man?”

“No,” said Marais softly.

“Very well, that is just like you, but it doesn’t matter, for she is of
age and can give herself. Is she not of age, Henri Marais? Don’t stand
there like a horse with the staggers, but tell me; is she not of age?”

“I believe so,” he answered in the same soft voice.

“Then take notice, people all, that this woman is of age, and gives
herself to be married to this man, don’t you, my dear?”

“Yes,” answered Marie.

“All right, now for it,” and, opening the book, he held it up to the
light, and began to read, or, rather, to stumble, through the marriage
service.

Presently he stuck fast, being, like most Boers of his time, no great
scholar, and exclaimed:

“Here, one of you help me with these hard words.”

As nobody volunteered, Retief handed the book to me, for he knew that
Marais would not assist him, saying:

“You are a scholar, Allan, being a clergyman’s son. Read on till we
come to the important bits, and I will say the words after you, which
will do just as well and be quite according to law.”

So I read, Heaven knows how, for the situation was trying enough, until
I came to the crucial questions, when I gave the book back.

“Ah!” said Retief; “this is quite easy. Now then, Allan, do you take
this woman to be your wife? Answer, putting in your name, which is left
blank in the book.”

I replied that I did, and the question was repeated to Marie, who did
likewise.

“Well then, there you are,” said Retief, “for I won’t trouble you with
all the prayers, which I don’t feel myself parson enough to say. Oh!
no, I forgot. Have you a ring?”

I drew one off my finger that had been my mother’s—I believe it had
served this same purpose at the wedding of her grandmother—and set the
thin little hoop of gold upon the third finger of Marie’s left hand. I
still wear that ring to-day.

“It should have been a new one,” muttered Vrouw Prinsloo.

“Be silent, aunt,” said Retief; “are there any jewellers’ shops here in
the veld? A ring is a ring, even if it came off a horse’s bit. There, I
think that is all. No, wait a minute, I am going to say a prayer of my
own over you, not one out of this book, which is so badly printed that
I cannot read it. Kneel down, both of you; the rest may stand, as the
grass is so wet.”

Now, bethinking herself of Marie’s new dress, the vrouw produced her
_vatdoek_ from a capacious pocket, and doubled up that dingy article
for Marie to kneel on, which she did. Then Pieter Retief, flinging down
the book, clasped his hands and uttered this simple, earnest prayer,
whereof, strangely enough, every word remains fast in my mind. Coming
as it did, not from a printed page, but from his honest and believing
heart, it was very impressive and solemn.

“O God above us, Who sees all and is with us when we are born, when we
are married, when we die, and if we do our duty for all time afterwards
in Heaven, hear our prayer. I pray Thee bless this man and this woman
who appear here before Thee to be wed. Make them love each other truly
all their lives, be these long or short, be they sick or well, be they
happy or in sorrow, be they rich or poor. Give them children to be
reared up in Thy Word, give them an honest name and the respect of all
who know them, and at last give them Thy Salvation through the Blood of
Jesus the Saviour. If they are together, let them rejoice in each
other. If they are apart, let them not forget each other. If one of
them dies and the other lives, let that one who lives look forward to
the day of reunion and bow the head to Thy Will, and keep that one who
dies in Thy holy Hand. O Thou Who knowest all things, guide the lives
of these two according to Thy eternal purpose, and teach them to be
sure that whatever Thou doest, is done for the best. For Thou art a
faithful Creator, Who wishes good to His children and not evil, and at
the last Thou wilt give them that good if they do but trust in Thee
through daylight and through darkness. Now let no man dare to put
asunder those whom Thou hast joined together, O Lord God Almighty,
Father of us all. Amen.”

So he prayed, and all the company echoed that Amen from their hearts.
That is all except one, for Henri Marais turned his back on us and
walked away.

“So,” said Retief, wiping his brow with the sleeve of his coat, “you
are the last couple that ever I mean to marry. The work is too hard for
a layman who has bad sight for print. Now kiss each other; it is the
right thing to do.”

So we kissed, and the congregation cheered.

“Allan,” went on the commandant, pulling out a silver watch like a
turnip, “you have just half an hour before we ride, and the Vrouw
Prinsloo says that she has made you a wedding meal in that tent there,
so you had best go eat it.”

To the tent we went accordingly, to find a simple but bounteous feast
prepared, of which we partook, helping each other to food, as is, or
was, the custom with new-wedded folk. Also, many Boers came in and
drank our healths, although the Vrouw Prinsloo told them that it would
have been more decent to leave us alone. But Henri Marais did not come
or drink our healths.

Thus the half-hour went all too swiftly, and not a word did we get
alone. At last in despair, seeing that Hans was already waiting with
the horses, I drew Marie aside, motioning to everyone to stand back.

“Dearest wife,” I said in broken words, “this is a strange beginning to
our married life, but you see it can’t be helped.”

“No, Allan,” she answered, “it can’t be helped; but oh! I wish my heart
were happier about your journey. I fear Dingaan, and if anything should
chance to you I shall die of grief.”

“Why should anything chance, Marie? We are a strong and well-armed
party, and Dingaan looks on us peacefully.”

“I don’t know, husband, but they say Hernan Pereira is with the Zulus,
and he hates you.”

“Then he had better mind his manners, or he will not be here long to
hate anybody,” I answered grimly, for my gorge rose at the thought of
this man and his treacheries.

“Vrouw Prinsloo,” I called to the old lady, who was near, “be pleased
to come hither and listen. And, Marie, do you listen also. If by chance
I should hear anything affecting your safety, and send you a message by
someone you can trust, such as that you should remove yourselves
elsewhere or hide, promise me that you will obey it without question.”

“Of course I will obey you, husband. Have I not just sworn to do so?”
Marie said with a sad smile.

“And so will I, Allan,” said the vrouw; “not because I have sworn
anything, but because I know you have a good head on your shoulders,
and so will my man and the others of our party. Though why you should
think you will have any message to send, I can’t guess, unless you know
something that is hidden from us,” she added shrewdly. “You say you
don’t; well, it is not likely you would tell us if you did. Look! They
are calling, you must go. Come on, Marie, let us see them off.”

So we went to where the commission was gathered on horseback, just in
time to hear Retief addressing the people, or, rather, the last of his
words.

“Friends,” he said, “we go upon an important business, from which I
hope we shall return happily within a very little time. Still, this is
a rough country, and we have to deal with rough people. Therefore my
advice to all you who stay behind is that you should not scatter, but
keep together, so that in case of any trouble the men who are left may
be at hand to defend this camp. For if they are here you have nothing
to fear from all the savages in Africa. And now God be with you, and
good-bye. Come, trek, brothers, trek!”

Then followed a few moments of confusion while men kissed their wives,
children and sisters in farewell, or shook each other by the hand. I,
too, kissed Marie, and, tumbling on to my horse somehow, rode away, my
eyes blind with tears, for this parting was bitter. When I could see
clearly again I pulled up and looked back at the camp, which was now at
some distance. It seemed a peaceful place indeed, for although the
storm of the morning was returning and a pall of dark cloud hung over
it, the sun still shone upon the white wagon caps and the people who
went to and fro among them.

Who could have thought that within a little time it would be but a
field of blood, that those wagons would be riddled with assegais, and
that the women and children who were moving there must most of them lie
upon the veld mutilated corpses dreadful to behold? Alas! the Boers,
always impatient of authority and confident that their own individual
judgment was the best, did not obey their commandant’s order to keep
together. They went off this way and that, to shoot the game which was
then so plentiful, leaving their families almost without protection.
Thus the Zulus found and slew them.

Presently as I rode forward a little apart from the others someone
overtook me, and I saw that it was Henri Marais.

“Well, Allan,” he said, “so God has given you to me for a son-in-law.
Who would have thought it? You do not look to me like a new-married
man, for that marriage is not natural when the bridegroom rides off and
leaves the bride of an hour. Perhaps you will never be really married
after all, for God, Who gives sons-in-law, can also take them away,
especially when He was not asked for them. Ah!” he went on, lapsing
into French, as was his wont when moved, “_qui vivra verra! qui vivra
verra!_” Then, shouting this excellent but obvious proverb at the top
of his voice, he struck his horse with the butt of his gun, and
galloped away before I could answer him.

At that moment I hated Henri Marais as I had never hated anyone before,
not even his nephew Hernan. Almost did I ride to the commandant to
complain of him, but reflecting to myself, first that he was
undoubtedly half mad, and therefore not responsible for his actions,
and secondly that he was better here with us than in the same camp with
my wife, I gave up the idea. Yet alas! it is the half-mad who are the
most dangerous of lunatics.

Hans, who had observed this scene and overheard all Marais’s talk, and
who also knew the state of the case well enough, sidled his horse
alongside of me, and whispered in a wheedling voice:

“Baas, I think the old baas is _kransick_ and not safe. He looks like
one who is going to harm someone. Now, baas, suppose I let my gun off
by accident; you know we coloured people are very careless with guns!
The Heer Marais would never be troubled with any more fancies, and you
and the Missie Marie and all of us would be safer. Also, _you_ could
not be blamed, nor could I, for who can help an accident? Guns will go
off sometimes, baas, when you don’t want them to.”

“Get out,” I answered. Yet if Hans’s gun had chanced to “go off,” I
believe it might have saved a multitude of lives!




CHAPTER XVIII.
THE TREATY


Our journey to Umgungundhlovu was prosperous and without incident. When
we were within half a day’s march from the Great Kraal we overtook the
herd of cattle that we had recaptured from Sikonyela, for these beasts
had been driven very slowly and well rested that they might arrive in
good condition. Also the commandant was anxious that we should present
them ourselves to the king.

Driving this multitude of animals before us—there were over five
thousand head of them—we reached the Great Place on Saturday the 3rd of
February about midday, and forced them through its gates into the
cattle kraals. Then we off-saddled and ate our dinner under those two
milk trees near the gate of the kraal where I had bid good-bye to
Dingaan.

After dinner messengers came to ask us to visit the king, and with them
the youth, Thomas Halstead, who told the commandant that all weapons
must be left behind, since it was the Zulu law that no man might appear
before the king armed. To this Retief demurred, whereon the messengers
appealed to me, whom they had recognised, asking if that were not the
custom of their country.

I answered that I had not been in it long enough to know. Then there
was a pause while they sent for someone to bear evidence; at the time I
did not know whom, as I was not near enough to Thomas Halstead to make
inquiries. Presently this someone appeared, and turned out to be none
other than Hernan Pereira.

He advanced towards us attended by Zulus, as though he were a chief,
looking fat and well and handsomer than ever. Seeing Retief, he lifted
his hat with a flourish and held out his hand, which, I noted, the
commandant did not take.

“So you are still here, Mynheer Pereira!” he said coldly. “Now be good
enough to tell me, what is this matter about the abandoning of our
arms?”

“The king charges me to say—” began Hernan.

“Charges you to say, Mynheer Pereira! Are you then this black man’s
servant? But continue.”

“That none must come into his private enclosure armed.”

“Well, then, mynheer, be pleased to go tell this king that we do not
wish to come to his private enclosure. I have brought the cattle that
he desired me to fetch, and I am willing to deliver them to him
wherever he wishes, but we will not unarm in order to do so.”

Now there was talk, and messengers were despatched, who returned at
full speed presently to say that Dingaan would receive the Boers in the
great dancing place in the midst of the kraal, and that they might
bring their guns, as he wished to see how they fired them.

So we rode in, making as fine a show as we could, to find that the
dancing place, which measured a good many acres in extent, was lined
round with thousands of plumed but unarmed warriors arranged in
regiments.

“You see,” I heard Pereira say to Retief, “these have no spears.”

“No,” answered the commandant, “but they have sticks, which when they
are a hundred to one would serve as well.”

Meanwhile the vast mob of cattle were being driven in a double stream
past a knot of men at the head of the space, and then away through
gates behind. When the beasts had all gone we approached these men,
among whom I recognised the fat form of Dingaan draped in a bead
mantle. We ranged ourselves in a semicircle before him, and stood while
he searched us with his sharp eyes. Presently he saw me, and sent a
councillor to say that I must come and interpret for him.

So, dismounting, I went with Retief, Thomas Halstead, and a few of the
leading Boers.

“_Sakubona_ [Good day], Macumazahn,” said Dingaan. “I am glad that you
have come, as I know that you will speak my words truly, being one of
the People of George whom I love, for Tho-maas here I do not trust,
although he is also a Son of George.”

I told Retief what he said.

“Oh!” he exclaimed with a grunt, “it seems that you English are a step
in front of us Boers, even here.”

Then he went forward and shook hands with the king, whom, it will be
remembered, he had visited before.

After that the _indaba_ or talk began, which I do not propose to set
out at length, for it is a matter of history. It is enough to say that
Dingaan, after thanking Retief for recovering the cattle, asked where
was Sikonyela, the chief who had stolen them, as he wished to kill him.
When he learned that Sikonyela remained in his own country, he became,
or affected to become, angry. Then he asked where were the sixty horses
which he heard we had captured from Sikonyela, as they must be given up
to him.

Retief, by way of reply, touched his grey hairs, and inquired whether
Dingaan thought that he was a child that he, Dingaan, should demand
horses which did not belong to him. He added that these horses had been
restored to the Boers, from whom Sikonyela had stolen them.

When Dingaan had expressed himself satisfied with this answer, Retief
opened the question of the treaty. The king replied however, that the
white men had but just arrived, and he wished to see them dance after
their own fashion. As for the business, it might “sit still” till
another day.

So in the end the Boers “danced” for his amusement. That is, they
divided into two parties, and charged each other at full gallop, firing
their guns into the air, an exhibition which seemed to fill all present
with admiration and awe. When they paused, the king wished them to go
on firing “a hundred shots apiece,” but the commandant declined, saying
he had no more powder to waste.

“What do you want powder for in a peaceful country?” asked Dingaan
suspiciously.

Retief answered through me:

“To kill food for ourselves, or to protect ourselves if any evil-minded
men should attack us.”

“Then it will not be wanted here,” said Dingaan, “since I will give you
food, and as I, the king, am your friend, no man in Zululand dare be
your enemy.”

Retief said he was glad to hear it, and asked leave to retire with the
Boers to his camp outside the gate, as they were all tired with riding.
This Dingaan granted, and we said good-bye and went away. Before I
reached the gate, however, a messenger, I remember it was my old friend
Kambula, overtook me, and said that the king wished to speak with me
alone. I answered him that I could not speak with the king alone
without the permission of the commandant. Thereon Kambula said:

“Come with me, I pray you, O Macumazahn, since otherwise you will be
taken by force.”

Now, I told Hans to gallop on to Retief, and tell him of my
predicament, for already I saw that at some sign from Kambula I was
being surrounded by Zulus. He did so, and presently Retief came back
himself accompanied only by one man, and asked me what was the matter
now. I informed him, translating Kambula’s words, which he repeated in
his presence.

“Does the fellow mean that you will be seized if you do not go, or I
refuse to allow you to do so?”

To this question Kambula’s answer was:

“That is so, _Inkoos_, since the king has private words for the ear of
Macumazahn. Therefore we must obey orders, and take him before the
king, living or dead.”

“Allemachte!” exclaimed Retief, “this is serious,” and, as though to
summon them to my help, he looked behind him towards the main body of
the Boers, who by this time were nearly all of them through the gate,
which was guarded by a great number of Zulus. “Allan,” he went on, “if
you are not afraid, I think that you must go. Perhaps it is only that
Dingaan has some message about the treaty to send to me through you.”

“I am not afraid,” I answered. “What is the use of being afraid in a
place like this?”

“Ask that Kaffir if the king gives you safe conduct,” said Retief.

I did so, and Kambula answered:

“Yes, for this visit. Who am I that I can speak the king’s unspoken
words?” [which meant, guarantee his will in the future.]

“A dark saying,” commented Retief. “But go, Allan, since you must, and
God bring you back safe again. It is clear that Dingaan did not ask
that you should come with me for nothing. Now I wish I had left you at
home with that pretty wife of yours.”

So we parted, I going to the king’s private enclosure on foot and
without my rifle, since I was not allowed to appear before him armed,
and the commandant towards the gate of the kraal accompanied by Hans,
who led my horse. Ten minutes later I stood before Dingaan, who greeted
me kindly enough, and began to ask a number of questions about the
Boers, especially if they were not people who had rebelled against
their own king and run away from him.

I answered, Yes, they had run away, as they wanted more room to live;
but I had told him all about that when I saw him before. He said he
knew I had, but he wished to hear “whether the same words came out of
the same mouth, or different words,” so that he might know if I were a
true man or not. Then, after pausing a while, he looked at me in his
piercing fashion and asked:

“Have you brought me a present of that tall white girl with eyes like
two stars, Macumazahn? I mean the girl whom you refused to me, and whom
I could not take because you had won your bet, which gave all the white
people to you; she for whose sake you make brothers of these Boers, who
are traitors to their king?”

“No, O Dingaan,” I answered; “there are no women among us. Moreover,
this maid is now my wife.”

“Your wife!” he exclaimed angrily. “By the Head of the Black One, have
you dared to make a wife of her whom I desired? Now say, boy, you
clever Watcher by Night; you little white ant, who work in the dark and
only peep out at the end of your tunnel when it is finished; you
wizard, who by your magic can snatch his prey out of the hand of the
greatest king in all the world—for it was magic that killed those
vultures on Hloma Amabutu, not your bullets, Macumazahn—say, why should
I not make an end of you at once for this trick?”

I folded my arms and looked at him. A strange contrast we must have
made, this huge, black tyrant with the royal air, for to do him justice
he had that, at whose nod hundreds went the way of death, and I, a mere
insignificant white boy, for in appearance, at any rate, I was nothing
more.

“O Dingaan,” I said coolly, knowing that coolness was my only chance,
“I answer you in the words of the Commandant Retief, the great chief.
Do you take me for a child that I should give up my own wife to you who
already have so many? Moreover, you cannot kill me because I have the
word of your captain, Kambula, that I am safe with you.”

This reply seemed to amuse him. At any rate, with one of those almost
infantile changes of mood which are common to savages of every degree,
he passed from wrath to laughter.

“You are quick as a lizard,” he said. “Why should I, who have so many
wives, want one more, who would certainly hate me? Just because she is
white, and would make the others, who are black, jealous, I suppose.
Indeed, they would poison her, or pinch her to death in a month, and
then come to tell me she had died of fretting. Also, you are right; you
have my safe conduct, and must go hence unharmed this time. But look
you, little lizard, although you escape me between the stones, I will
pull off your tail. I have said that I want to pluck this tall white
flower of yours, and I will pluck her. I know where she dwells. Yes,
just where the wagon she sleeps in stands in the line, for my spies
have told me, and I will give orders that whoever is killed, she is to
be spared and brought to me living. So perhaps you will meet this wife
of yours here, Macumazahn.”

Now, at these ominous words, that might mean so much or so little, the
sweat started to my brow, and a shiver went down my back.

“Perhaps I shall and perhaps I shall not, O king,” I answered. “The
world is as full of chances to-day as it was not long ago when I shot
at the sacred vultures on Hloma Amabutu. Still, I think that my wife
will never be yours, O king.”

“_Ow!_” said Dingaan; “this little white ant is making another tunnel,
thinking that he will come up at my back. But what if I put down my
heel and crush you, little white ant? Do you know,” he added
confidentially, “that the Boer who mends my guns and whom here we call
‘Two-faces,’ because he looks towards you Whites with one eye and
towards us Blacks with the other, is still very anxious that I should
kill you? Indeed, when I told him that my spies said that you were to
ride with the Boers, as I had requested that you should be their
Tongue, he answered that unless I promised to give you to the vultures,
he would warn them against coming. So, since I wanted them to come as I
had arranged with him, I promised.”

“Is it so, O king?” I asked. “And pray why does this Two-faces, whom we
name Pereira, desire that I should be killed?”

“_Ow!_” chuckled the obese old ruffian; “cannot you with all your
cleverness guess that, O Macumazahn? Perhaps it is he who needs the
tall white maiden, and not I. Perhaps if he does certain things for me,
I have promised her to him in payment. And perhaps,” he added, laughing
quite loud, “I shall trick him after all, keeping her for myself, and
paying him in another way, for can a cheat grumble if he is
out-cheated?”

I answered that I was an honest man, and knew nothing about cheats, or
at what they could or could not grumble.

“Yes, Macumazahn,” replied Dingaan quite genially. “That is where you
and I are alike. We are both honest, quite honest, and therefore
friends, which I can never be with these Amaboona, who, as you and
others have told me, are traitors. We play our game in the light, like
men, and who wins, wins, and who loses, loses. Now hear me, Macumazahn,
and remember what I say. Whatever happens to others, whatever you may
see, you are safe while I live. Dingaan has spoken. Whether I get the
tall white girl, or do not get her, still _you_ are safe; it is on my
head,” and he touched the gum-ring in his hair.

“And why should I be safe if others are unsafe, O king?” I asked.

“Oh! if you would know that, ask a certain ancient prophet named
Zikali, who was in this land in the days of Senzangacona, my father,
and before then—that is, if you can find him. Also, I like you, who are
not a flat-faced fool like these Amaboona, but have a brain that turns
in and out through difficulties, as a snake does through reeds; and it
would be a pity to kill one who can shoot birds wheeling high above him
in the air, which no one else can do. So whatever you see and whatever
you hear, remember that you are safe, and shall go safely from this
land, or stay safely in it if you will, to be my voice to speak with
the Sons of George.

“Now return to the commandant, and say to him that my heart is his
heart, and that I am very pleased to see him here. To-morrow, and
perhaps the next day, I will show him some of the dances of my people,
and after that I will sign the writing, giving him all the land he asks
and everything else he may desire, more than he can wish, indeed.
_Hamba gachlé_, Macumazahn,” and, rising with surprising quickness from
his chair, which was cut out of a single block of wood, he turned and
vanished through the little opening in the reed fence behind him that
led to his private huts.

As I was being conducted back to the Boer camp by Kambula, who was
waiting for me outside the gate of the labyrinth which is called
_isiklohlo_, I met Thomas Halstead, who was lounging about, I think in
order to speak with me. Halting, I asked him straight out what the
king’s intentions were towards the Boers.

“Don’t know,” he answered, shrugging his shoulders, “but he seems so
sweet on them that I think he must be up to mischief. He is wonderfully
fond of you, too, for I heard him give orders that the word was to be
passed through all the regiments that if anyone so much as hurt you, he
should be killed at once. Also, you were pointed out to the soldiers
when you rode in with the rest, that they might all of them know you.”

“That’s good for me as far as it goes,” I replied. “But I don’t know
why I should need special protection above others, unless there is
someone who wants to harm me.”

“There is that, Allan Quatermain. The _indunas_ tell me that the
good-looking Portugee, whom they call ‘Two-faces,’ asks the king to
kill you every time he sees him. Indeed, I’ve heard him myself.”

“That’s kind of him,” I answered, “but, then, Hernan Pereira and I
never got on. Tell me what is he talking about to the king when he
isn’t asking him to kill me.”

“Don’t know,” he said again. “Something dirty, I’ll be bound. One may
be sure of that by the native name they have given him. I think,
however,” he added in a whisper, “that he has had a lot to do with the
Boers being allowed to come here at all in order to get their treaty
signed. At least, one day when I was interpreting and Dingaan swore
that he would not give them more land than was enough to bury them in,
Pereira told him that it didn’t matter what he signed, as ‘what was
written with the pen could be scratched out with the spear.’”

“Indeed! And what did the king say to that?”

“Oh! he laughed and said it was true, and that he would give the Boer
commission all their people wanted and something over for themselves.
But don’t you repeat that, Quatermain, for if you do, and it gets to
the ear of Dingaan, I shall certainly be killed. And, I say, you’re a
good fellow, and I won a big bet on you over that vulture shooting, so
I will give you a bit of advice, which you will be wise to take. You
get out of this country as soon as you can, and go to look after that
pretty Miss Marais, whom you are sweet on. Dingaan wants her, and what
Dingaan wants he gets in this part of the world.”

Then, without waiting to be thanked, he turned and disappeared among a
crowd of Zulus, who were following us from curiosity, leaving me
wondering whether or no Dingaan was right when he called this young man
a liar. His story seemed to tally so well with that told by the king
himself, that on the whole I thought he was not.

Just after I had passed the main gateway of the great town, where, his
office done, Kambula saluted and left me, I saw two white men engaged
in earnest conversation beneath one of the milk trees which, as I think
I have already mentioned, grow, or grew, there. They were Henri Marais
and his nephew. Catching sight of me, Marais walked off, but Pereira
advanced and spoke to me, although, warned perhaps by what had happened
to him in the case of Retief, I am glad to say he did not offer me his
hand.

“Good day to you, Allan,” he said effusively. “I have just heard from
my uncle that I have to congratulate you, about Marie I mean, and,
believe me, I do so with all my heart.”

Now, as he spoke these words, remembering what I had just heard, my
blood boiled in me, but I thought it wise to control myself, and
therefore only answered:

“Thank you.”

“Of course,” he went on, “we have both striven for this prize, but as
it has pleased God that you should win it, why, I am not one to bear
malice.”

“I am glad to hear it,” I replied. “I thought that perhaps you might
be. Now tell me, to change the subject, how long will Dingaan keep us
here?”

“Oh! two or three days at most. You see, Allan, luckily I have been
able to persuade him to sign the treaty about the land without further
trouble. So as soon as that is done, you can all go home.”

“The commandant will be very grateful to you,” I said. “But what are
you going to do?”

“I do not know, Allan. You see, I am not a lucky fellow like yourself
with a wife waiting for me. I think that perhaps I shall stop here a
while. I see a way of making a great deal of money out of these Zulus;
and having lost everything upon that Delagoa Bay trek, I want money.”

“We all do,” I answered, “especially if we are starting in life. So
when it is convenient to you to settle your debts I shall be glad.”

“Oh! have no fear,” he exclaimed with a sudden lighting up of his dark
face, “I will pay you what I owe you, every farthing, with good
interest thrown in.”

“The king has just told me that is your intention,” I remarked quietly,
looking him full in the eyes. Then I walked on, leaving him staring
after me, apparently without a word to say.

I went straight to the hut that was allotted to Retief in the little
outlying guard-kraal, which had been given to us for a camp. Here I
found the commandant seated on a Kaffir stool engaged in painfully
writing a letter, using a bit of board placed on his knees as a desk.

He looked up, and asked me how I had got on with Dingaan, not being
sorry, as I think, of an excuse to pause in his clerical labours.

“Listen, commandant,” I said, and, speaking in a low voice, so as not
to be overheard, I told him every word that had passed in the
interviews I had just had with Dingaan, with Thomas Halstead, and with
Pereira.

He heard me out in silence, then said:

“This is a strange and ugly story, Allan, and if it is true, Pereira
must be an even bigger scoundrel than I thought him. But I can’t
believe that it is true. I think that Dingaan has been lying to you for
his own purposes; I mean about the plot to kill you.”

“Perhaps, commandant. I don’t know, and I don’t much care. But I am
sure that he was not lying when he said he meant to steal away my wife
either for himself or for Pereira.”

“What, then, do you intend to do, Allan?”

“I intend, commandant, with your permission to send Hans, my
after-rider, back to the camp with a letter for Marie, telling her to
remove herself quietly to the farm I have chosen down on the river, of
which I told you, and there to lie hid till I come back.”

“I think it needless, Allan. Still, if it will ease your mind, do so,
since I cannot spare you to go yourself. Only you must not send this
Hottentot, who would talk and frighten the people. I am despatching a
messenger to the camp to tell them of our safe arrival and good
reception by Dingaan. He can take your letter, in which I order you to
say to your wife that if she and the Prinsloos and the Meyers go to
this farm of yours, they are to go without talking, just as though they
wanted a change, that is all. Have the letter ready by dawn to-morrow
morning, as I trust mine may be,” he added with a groan.

“It shall be ready, commandant; but what about Hernan Pereira and his
tricks?”

“This about the accursed Hernan Pereira,” exclaimed Retief, striking
the writing-board with his fist. “On the first opportunity I will
myself take the evidence of Dingaan and of the English lad, Halstead.
If I find they tell me the same story they have told you, I will put
Pereira on his trial, as I threatened to do before; and should he be
found guilty, by God! I will have him shot. But for the present it is
best to do nothing, except keep an eye on him, lest we should cause
fear and scandal in the camp, and, after all, not prove the case. Now
go and write your letter, and leave me to write mine.”

So I went and wrote, telling Marie something, but by no means all of
that I have set down. I bade her, and the Prinsloos and the Meyers, if
they would accompany her, as I was sure they would, move themselves off
at once to the farm I had beaconed out thirty miles away from the
Bushman’s River, under pretence of seeing how the houses that were
being built there were getting on. Or if they would not go, I bade her
go alone with a few Hottentot servants, or any other companions she
could find.

This letter I took to Retief, and read it to him. At my request, also,
he scrawled at the foot of it:

“I have seen the above and approve it, knowing all the story, which may
be true or false. Do as your husband bids you, but do not talk of it in
the camp except to those whom he mentions.—PIETER RETIEF.”


So the messenger departed at dawn, and in due course delivered my
letter to Marie.

The next day was Sunday. In the morning I went to call upon the
Reverend Mr. Owen, the missionary, who was very glad to see me. He
informed me that Dingaan was in good mind towards us, and had been
asking him if he would write the treaty ceding the land which the Boers
wanted. I stopped for service at the huts of Mr. Owen, and then
returned to the camp. In the afternoon Dingaan celebrated a great war
dance for us to witness, in which about twelve thousand soldiers took
part.

It was a wonderful and awe-inspiring spectacle, and I remember that
each of the regiments employed had a number of trained oxen which
manoeuvred with them, apparently at given words of command. We did not
see Dingaan that day, except at a distance, and after the dance was
over returned to our camp to eat the beef which he had provided for us
in plenty.

On the third day—that was Monday, the 5th of February, there were more
dancings and sham fights, so many more, indeed, that we began to weary
of this savage show. Late in the afternoon, however, Dingaan sent for
the commandant and his men to come to see him, saying that he wished to
talk with him about the matter of the treaty. So we went; but only
three or four, of whom I was one, were admitted to Dingaan’s presence,
the rest remaining at a little distance, where they could see us but
were out of earshot.

Dingaan then produced a paper which had been written by the Reverend
Mr. Owen. This document, which I believe still exists, for it was found
afterwards, was drawn up in legal or semi-legal form, beginning like a
proclamation, “Know all men.”

It ceded “the place called Port Natal, together with all the land
annexed—that is to say, from Tugela to the Umzimvubu River westward,
and from the sea to the north”—to the Boers, “for their everlasting
property.” At the king’s request, as the deed was written in English by
Mr. Owen, I translated it to him, and afterwards the lad Halstead
translated it also, being called in to do so when I had finished.

This was done that my rendering might be checked, and the fact
impressed all the Boers very favourably. It showed them that the king
desired to understand exactly what he was to sign, which would not have
been the case had he intended any trick or proposed to cheat them
afterwards. From that moment forward Retief and his people had no
further doubts as to Dingaan’s good faith in this matter, and foolishly
relaxed all precautions against treachery.

When the translating was finished, the commandant asked the king if he
would sign the paper then and there. He answered, “No; he would sign it
on the following morning, before the commission returned to Natal.” It
was then that Retief inquired of Dingaan, through Thomas Halstead,
whether it was a true story which he had heard, that the Boer called
Pereira, who had been staying with him, and whom the Zulus knew by the
name of “Two-faces,” had again asked him, Dingaan, to have me, Allan
Quatermain, whom they called Macumazahn, killed. Dingaan laughed and
answered:

“Yes, that is true enough, for he hates this Macumazahn. But let the
little white Son of George have no fear, since my heart is soft towards
him, and I swear by the head of the Black One that he shall come to no
harm in Zululand. Is he not my guest, as you are?”

He then went on to say that if the commandant wished it, he would have
“Two-faces” seized and killed because he had dared to ask for my life.
Retief answered that he would look into that matter himself, and after
Thomas Halstead had confirmed the king’s story as to Pereira’s conduct,
he rose and said good-bye to Dingaan.

Of this matter of Hernan Pereira, Retief said little as we went back to
the camp outside the Kraal, though the little that he did say showed
his deep anger. When we arrived at the camp, however, he sent for
Pereira and Marais and several of the older Boers. I remember that
among these were Gerrit Bothma, Senior, Hendrik Labuschagne and Matthys
Pretorius, Senior, all of them persons of standing and judgment. I also
was ordered to be present. When Pereira arrived, Retief charged him
openly with having plotted my murder, and asked him what he had to say.
Of course, his answer was a flat denial, and an accusation against me
of having invented the tale because we had been at enmity over a maiden
whom I had since married.

“Then, Mynheer Pereira,” said Retief, “as Allan Quatermain here has won
the maiden who is now his wife, it would seem that his cause of enmity
must have ceased, whereas yours may well have remained. However, I have
no time to try cases of the sort now. But I warn you that this one will
be looked into later on when we get back to Natal, whither I shall take
you with me, and that meanwhile an eye is kept on you and what you do.
Also I warn you that I have evidence for all that I say. Now be so good
as to go, and to keep out of my sight as much as possible, for I do not
like a man whom these Kaffirs name ‘Two-faces.’ As for you, friend
Henri Marais, I tell you that you would do well to associate yourself
less with one whose name is under so dark a cloud, although he may be
your own nephew, whom all know you love blindly.”

So far as I recollect neither of them made any answer to this direct
speech. They simply turned and went away. But on the next morning, that
of the fatal 6th of February, when I chanced to meet the Commandant
Retief as he was riding through the camp making arrangements for our
departure to Natal, he pulled up his horse and said:

“Allan, Hernan Pereira has gone, and Henri Marais with him, and for my
part I am not sorry, for doubtless we shall meet again, in this world
or the next, and find out all the truth. Here, read this, and give it
back to me afterwards”; and he threw me a paper and rode on.

I opened the folded sheet and read as follows:

“To the Commandant Retief, Governor of the Emigrant Boers,

“Mynheer Commandant,

“I will not stay here, where such foul accusations are laid on me by
black Kaffirs and the Englishman, Allan Quatermain, who, like all his
race, is an enemy of us Boers, and, although you do not know it, a
traitor who is plotting great harm against you with the Zulus.
Therefore I leave you, but am ready to meet every charge at the right
time before a proper Court. My uncle, Henri Marais, comes with me, as
he feels that his honour is also touched. Moreover, he has heard that
his daughter, Marie, is in danger from the Zulus, and returns to
protect her, which he who is called her husband neglects to do. Allan
Quatermain, the Englishman, who is the friend of Dingaan, can explain
what I mean, for he knows more about the Zulu plans than I do, as you
will find out before the end.”

Then followed the signatures of Hernan Pereira and Henri Marais.

I put the letter in my pocket, wondering what might be its precise
meaning, and in particular that of the absurd and undefined charge of
treachery against myself. It seemed to me that Pereira had left us
because he was afraid of something—either that he might be placed upon
his trial or of some ultimate catastrophe in which he would be
involved. Marais probably had gone with him for the same reason that a
bit of iron follows a magnet, because he never could resist the
attraction of this evil man, his relative by birth. Or perhaps he had
learned from him the story of his daughter’s danger, upon which I had
already acted, and really was anxious about her safety. For it must
always be remembered that Marais loved Marie passionately, however ill
the reader of this history may think that he behaved to her. She was
his darling, the apple of his eye, and her great offence in his sight
was that she cared for me more than she did for him. That is one of the
reasons why he hated me as much as he loved her.

Almost before I had finished reading this letter, the order came that
we were to go in a body to bid farewell to Dingaan, leaving our arms
piled beneath the two milk trees at the gate of the town. Most of our
after-riders were commanded to accompany us—I think because Retief
wished to make as big a show as possible to impress the Zulus. A few of
these Hottentots, however, were told to stay behind that they might
collect the horses, that were knee-haltered and grazing at a distance,
and saddle them up. Among these was Hans, for, as it chanced, I saw and
sent him with the others, so that I might be sure that my own horses
would be found and made ready for the journey.

Just as we were starting, I met the lad William Wood, who had come down
from the Mission huts, where he lived with Mr. Owen, and was wandering
about with an anxious face.

“How are you, William?” I asked.

“Not very well, Mr. Quatermain,” he answered. “The fact is,” he added
with a burst of confidence, “I feel queerly about you all. The Kaffirs
have told me that something is going to happen to you, and I think you
ought to know it. I daren’t say any more,” and he vanished into the
crowd.

At that moment I caught sight of Retief riding to and fro and shouting
out orders. Going to him, I caught him by the sleeve, saying:

“Commandant, listen to me.”

“Well, what is it now, nephew?” he asked absently.

I told him what Wood had said, adding that I also was uneasy; I did not
know why.

“Oh!” he answered with impatience, “this is all hailstones and burnt
grass” (meaning that the one would melt and the other blow away, or in
our English idiom, stuff and rubbish). “Why are you always trying to
scare me with your fancies, Allan? Dingaan is our friend, not our
enemy. So let us take the gifts that fortune gives us and be thankful.
Come, march.”

This he said about eight o’clock in the morning.

We strolled through the gates of the Great Kraal, most of the Boers,
who, as usual, had piled their arms under the two milk trees, lounging
along in knots of four or five, laughing and chatting as they went. I
have often thought since, that although every one of them there, except
myself, was doomed within an hour to have taken the dreadful step from
time into eternity, it seems strange that advancing fate should have
thrown no shadow on their hearts. On the contrary, they were quite gay,
being extremely pleased at the successful issue of their mission and
the prospect of an immediate return to their wives and children. Even
Retief was gay, for I heard him joking with his companions about myself
and my “white-bread-week,” or honeymoon, which, he said, was drawing
very near.

As we went, I noticed that most of the regiments who had performed the
great military dances before us on the previous day were gone. Two,
however, remained—the _Ischlangu Inhlope_, that is the “White Shields,”
who were a corps of veterans wearing the ring on their heads, and the
_Ischlangu Umnyama_, that is the “Black Shields,” who were all of them
young men without rings. The “White Shields” were ranged along the
fence of the great open place to our left, and the “Black Shields” were
similarly placed to our right, each regiment numbering about fifteen
hundred men. Except for their kerries and dancing-sticks they were
unarmed.

Presently we reached the head of the dancing ground, and found Dingaan
seated in his chair with two of his great _indunas_, Umhlela and
Tambusa, squatting on either side of him. Behind him, standing in and
about the entrance to the labyrinth through which the king had come,
were other _indunas_ and captains. On arriving in front of Dingaan we
saluted him, and he acknowledged the salutation with pleasant words and
smiles. Then Retief, two or three of the other Boers, Thomas Halstead
and I went forward, whereon the treaty was produced again and
identified as the same document that we had seen on the previous day.

At the foot of it someone—I forget who—wrote in Dutch, “_De merk van
Koning Dingaan_” [that is, The mark of King Dingaan.] In the space left
between the words “_merk_” and “_van_” Dingaan made a cross with a pen
that was given to him, Thomas Halstead holding his hand and showing him
what to do.

After this, three of his indunas, or great councillors, who were named
Nwara, Yuliwana and Manondo, testified as witnesses for the Zulus, and
M. Oosthuyzen, A. C. Greyling and B. J. Liebenberg, who were standing
nearest to Retief, as witnesses for the Boers.

This done, Dingaan ordered one of his _isibongos_, or praisers, to run
to and fro in front of the regiments and others there assembled, and
proclaim that he had granted Natal to the Boers to be their property
for ever, information which the Zulus received with shouts. Then
Dingaan asked Retief if he would not eat, and large trenchers of boiled
beef were brought out and handed round. This, however, the Boers
refused, saying they had already breakfasted. Thereon the king said
that at least they must drink, and pots of _twala_, or Kaffir beer,
were handed round, of which all the Boers partook.

While they were drinking, Dingaan gave Retief a message to the Dutch
farmers, to the effect that he hoped they would soon come and occupy
Natal, which henceforth was their country. Also, black-hearted villain
that he was, that they would have a pleasant journey home. Next he
ordered the two regiments to dance and sing war songs, in order to
amuse his guests.

This they began to do, drawing nearer as they danced.

It was at this moment that a Zulu appeared, pushing his way through the
captains who were gathered at the gate of the labyrinth, and delivered
some message to one of the _indunas_, who in turn passed it on to the
king.

“_Ow!_ is it so?” said the king with a troubled look. Then his glance
fell on me as though by accident, and he added: “Macumazahn, one of my
wives is taken very ill suddenly, and says she must have some of the
medicine of the white men before they go away. Now, you tell me that
you are a new-married man, so I can trust you with my wives. I pray you
to go and find out what medicine it is that she needs, for you can
speak our tongue.”

I hesitated, then translated what he had said to Retief.

“You had best go, nephew,” said the commandant; “but come back quickly,
for we ride at once.”

Still I hesitated, not liking this business; whereon the king began to
grow angry.

“What!” he said, “do you white men refuse me this little favour, when I
have just given you so much—you who have wonderful medicines that can
cure the sick?”

“Go, Allan, go,” said Retief, when he understood his words, “or he will
grow cross and everything may be undone.”

So, having no choice, I went through the gateway into the labyrinth.

Next moment men pounced on me, and before I could utter a word a cloth
was thrown over my mouth and tied tight behind my head.

I was a prisoner and gagged.




CHAPTER XIX.
DEPART IN PEACE


A tall Kaffir, one of the king’s household guards, who carried an
assegai, came up to me and whispered:

“Hearken, little Son of George. The king would save you, if he can,
because you are not Dutch, but English. Yet, know that if you try to
cry out, if you even struggle, you die,” and he lifted the assegai so
as to be ready to plunge it through my heart.

Now I understood, and a cold sweat broke out all over me. My companions
were to be murdered, every one! Oh! gladly would I have given my life
to warn them. But alas! I could not, for the cloth upon my mouth was so
thick that no sound could pass it.

One of the Zulus inserted a stick between the reeds of the fence.
Working it to and fro sideways, he made an opening just in a line with
my eyes—out of cruelty, I suppose, for now I must see everything.

For some time—ten minutes, I dare say—the dancing and beer-drinking
went on. Then Dingaan rose from his chair and shook the hand of Retief
warmly, bidding him “_Hamba gachlé_,” that is, Depart gently, or in
peace. He retreated towards the gate of the labyrinth, and as he went
the Boers took off their hats, waving them in the air and cheering him.
He was almost through it, and I began to breathe again.

Doubtless I was mistaken. After all, no treachery was intended.

In the very opening of the gate Dingaan turned, however, and said two
words in Zulu which mean:

“Seize them!”

Instantly the warriors, who had now danced quite close and were waiting
for these words, rushed upon the Boers. I heard Thomas Halstead call
out in English:

“We are done for,” and then add in Zulu, “Let me speak to the king!”

Dingaan heard also, and waved his hand to show that he refused to
listen, and as he did so shouted thrice:

“_Bulala abatagati!_” that is, Slay the wizards!

I saw poor Halstead draw his knife and plunge it into a Zulu who was
near him. The man fell, and again he struck at another soldier, cutting
his throat. The Boers also drew their knives—those of them who had
time—and tried to defend themselves against these black devils, who
rushed on them in swarms. I heard afterwards that they succeeded in
killing six or eight of them and wounding perhaps a score. But it was
soon over, for what could men armed only with pocket-knives do against
such a multitude?

Presently, amidst a hideous tumult of shouts, groans, curses, prayers
for mercy, and Zulu battle cries, the Boers were all struck down—yes,
even the two little lads and the Hottentot servants. Then they were
dragged away, still living, by the soldiers, their heels trailing on
the ground, just as wounded worms or insects are dragged by the black
ants.

Dingaan was standing by me now, laughing, his fat face working
nervously.

“Come, Son of George,” he said, “and let us see the end of these
traitors to your sovereign.”

Then I was pulled along to an eminence within the labyrinth, whence
there was a view of the surrounding country. Here we waited a little
while, listening to the tumult that grew more distant, till presently
the dreadful procession of death reappeared, coming round the fence of
the Great Kraal and heading straight for the Hill of Slaughter, Hloma
Amabutu. Soon its slopes were climbed, and there among the dark-leaved
bushes and the rocks the black soldiers butchered them, every one.

I saw and swooned away.

I believe that I remained senseless for many hours, though towards the
end of that time my swoon grew thin, as it were, and I heard a hollow
voice speaking over me in Zulu.

“I am glad that the little Son of George has been saved,” said the
echoing voice, which I did not know, “for he has a great destiny and
will be useful to the black people in time to come.” Then the voice
went on:

“O House of Senzangacona! now you have mixed your milk with blood, with
white blood. Of that bowl you shall drink to the dregs, and afterwards
must the bowl be shattered”; and the speaker laughed—a deep, dreadful
laugh that I was not to hear again for years.

I heard him go away, shuffling along like some great reptile, and then,
with an effort, opened my eyes. I was in a large hut, and the only
light in the hut came from a fire that burned in its centre, for it was
night time. A Zulu woman, young and good-looking, was bending over a
gourd near the fire, doing something to its contents. I spoke to her
light-headedly.

“O woman,” I said, “is that a man who laughed over me?”

“Not altogether, Macumazahn,” she answered in a pleasant voice. “That
was Zikali, the Mighty Magician, the Counsellor of Kings, the Opener of
Roads; he whose birth our grandfathers do not remember; he whose breath
causes the trees to be torn out by the roots; he whom Dingaan fears and
obeys.”

“Did he cause the Boers to be killed?” I asked.

“Mayhap,” she answered. “Who am I that I should know of such matters?”

“Are you the woman who was sick whom I was sent to visit?” I asked
again.

“Yes, Macumazahn, I was sick, but now I am well and you are sick, for
so things go round. Drink this,” and she handed me a gourd of milk.

“How are you named?” I inquired as I took it.

“Naya is my name,” she replied, “and I am your jailer. Don’t think that
you can escape me, though, Macumazahn, for there are other jailers
without who carry spears. Drink.”

So I drank and bethought me that the draught might be poisoned. Yet so
thirsty was I that I finished it, every drop.

“Now am I a dead man?” I asked, as I put down the gourd.

“No, no, Macumazahn,” she who called herself Naya replied in a soft
voice; “not a dead man, only one who will sleep and forget.”

Then I lost count of everything and slept—for how long I know not.

When I awoke again it was broad daylight; in fact, the sun stood high
in the heavens. Perhaps Naya had put some drug into my milk, or perhaps
I had simply slept. I do not know. At any rate, I was grateful for that
sleep, for without it I think that I should have gone mad. As it was,
when I remembered, which it took me some time to do, for a while I went
near to insanity.

I recollect lying there in that hut and wondering how the Almighty
could have permitted such a deed as I had seen done. How could it be
reconciled with any theory of a loving and merciful Father? Those poor
Boers, whatever their faults, and they had many, like the rest of us,
were in the main good and honest men according to their lights. Yet
they had been doomed to be thus brutally butchered at the nod of a
savage despot, their wives widowed, their children left fatherless, or,
as it proved in the end, in most cases murdered or orphaned!

The mystery was too great—great enough to throw off its balance the
mind of a young man who had witnessed such a fearsome scene as I have
described.

For some days really I think that my reason hung just upon the edge of
that mental precipice. In the end, however, reflection and education,
of which I had a certain amount, thanks to my father, came to my aid. I
recalled that such massacres, often on an infinitely larger scale, had
happened a thousand times in history, and that still through them,
often, indeed, by means of them, civilisation has marched forward, and
mercy and peace have kissed each other over the bloody graves of the
victims.

Therefore even in my youth and inexperience I concluded that some
ineffable purpose was at work through this horror, and that the lives
of those poor men which had been thus sacrificed were necessary to that
purpose. This may appear a dreadful and fatalistic doctrine, but it is
one that is corroborated in Nature every day, and doubtless the
sufferers meet with their compensations in some other state. Indeed, if
it be not so, faith and all the religions are vain.

Or, of course, it may chance that such monstrous calamities happen, not
through the will of the merciful Power of which I have spoken, but in
its despite. Perhaps the devil of Scripture, at whom we are inclined to
smile, is still very real and active in this world of ours. Perhaps
from time to time some evil principle breaks into eruption, like the
prisoned forces of a volcano, bearing death and misery on its wings,
until in the end it must depart strengthless and overcome. Who can say?

The question is one that should be referred to the Archbishop of
Canterbury and the Pope of Rome in conclave, with the Lama of Thibet
for umpire in case they disagreed. I only try to put down the thoughts
that struck me so long ago as my mind renders them to-day. But very
likely they are not quite the same thoughts, for a full generation has
gone by me since then, and in that time the intelligence ripens as wine
does in a bottle.

Besides these general matters, I had questions of my own to consider
during those days of imprisonment—for instance, that of my own safety,
though of this, to be honest, I thought little. If I were going to be
killed, I was going to be killed, and there was an end. But my
knowledge of Dingaan told me that he had not massacred Retief and his
companions for nothing. This would be but the prelude to a larger
slaughter, for I had not forgotten what he said as to the sparing of
Marie and the other hints he gave me.

From all this I concluded, quite rightly as it proved, that some
general onslaught was being made upon the Boers, who probably would be
swept out to the last man. And to think that here I was, a prisoner in
a Kaffir kraal, with only a young woman as a jailer, and yet utterly
unable to escape to warn them. For round my hut lay a courtyard, and
round it again ran a reed fence about five feet six inches high.
Whenever I looked over this fence, by night or by day, I saw soldiers
stationed at intervals of about fifteen yards. There they stood like
statues, their broad spears in their hands, all looking inwards towards
the fence. There they stood—only at night their number was doubled.
Clearly it was not meant that I should escape.

A week went by thus—believe me, a very terrible week. During that time
my sole companion was the pretty young woman, Naya. We became friends
in a way and talked on a variety of subjects. Only, at the end of our
conversations I always found that I had gained no information
whatsoever about any matter of immediate interest. On such points as
the history of the Zulu and kindred tribes, or the character of Chaka,
the great king, or anything else that was remote she would discourse by
the hour. But when we came to current events, she dried up like water
on a red-hot brick. Still, Naya grew, or pretended to grow, quite
attached to me. She even suggested naïvely that I might do worse than
marry her, which she said Dingaan was quite ready to allow, as he was
fond of me and thought I should be useful in his country. When I told
her that I was already married, she shrugged her shining shoulders and
asked with a laugh that revealed her beautiful teeth:

“What does that matter? Cannot a man have more wives than one? And,
Macumazahn,” she added, leaning forward and looking at me, “how do you
know that you have even one? You may be divorced or a widower by now.”

“What do you mean?” I asked.

“I? I mean nothing; do not look at me so fiercely, Macumazahn. Surely
such things happen in the world, do they not?”

“Naya,” I said, “you are two bad things—a bait and a spy—and you know
it.”

“Perhaps I do, Macumazahn,” she answered. “Am I to blame for that, if
my life is on it, especially when I really like you for yourself?”

“I don’t know,” I said. “Tell me, when am I going to get out of this
place?”

“How can I tell you, Macumazahn?” Naya replied, patting my hand in her
genial way, “but I think before long. When you are gone, Macumazahn,
remember me kindly sometimes, as I have really tried to make you as
comfortable as I could with a watcher staring through every straw in
the hut.”

I said whatever seemed to be appropriate, and next morning my
deliverance came. While I was eating my breakfast in the courtyard at
the back of the hut, Naya thrust her handsome and pleasant face round
the corner and said that there was a messenger to see me from the king.
Leaving the rest of the meal unswallowed, I went to the doorway of the
yard and there found my old friend, Kambula.

“Greeting, _Inkoos_,” he said to me; “I am come to take you back to
Natal with a guard. But I warn you to ask me no questions, for if you
do I must not answer them. Dingaan is ill, and you cannot see him, nor
can you see the white praying-man, or anyone; you must come with me at
once.”

“I do not want to see Dingaan,” I replied, looking him in the eyes.

“I understand,” answered Kambula; “Dingaan’s thoughts are his thoughts
and your thoughts are your thoughts, and perhaps that is why he does
not want to see _you_. Still, remember, _Inkoos_, that Dingaan has
saved your life, snatching you unburned out of a very great fire,
perhaps because you are of a different sort of wood, which he thinks it
a pity to burn. Now, if you are ready, let us go.”

“I am ready,” I answered.

At the gate I met Naya, who said:

“You never thought to say good-bye to me, White Man, although I have
tended you well. Ah! what else could I expect? Still, I hope that if I
should have to fly from this land for _my_ life, as may chance, you
will do for me what I have done for you.”

“That I will,” I answered, shaking her by the hand; and, as it
happened, in after years I did.

Kambula led me, not through the kraal Umgungundhlovu, but round it. Our
road lay immediately past the death mount, Hloma Amabutu, where the
vultures were still gathered in great numbers. Indeed, it was actually
my lot to walk over the new-picked bones of some of my companions who
had been despatched at the foot of the hill. One of these skeletons I
recognised by his clothes to be that of Samuel Esterhuizen, a very good
fellow, at whose side I had slept during all our march. His empty
eye-sockets seemed to stare at me reproachfully, as though they asked
me why I remained alive when he and all his brethren were dead. I
echoed the question in my own mind. Why of that great company did I
alone remain alive?

An answer seemed to rise within me: That I might be one of the
instruments of vengeance upon that devilish murderer, Dingaan. Looking
upon those poor shattered and desecrated frames that had been men, I
swore in my heart that if I lived I would not fail in that mission. Nor
did I fail, although the history of that great repayment cannot be told
in these pages.

Turning my eyes from this dreadful sight, I saw that on the opposite
slope, where we had camped during our southern trek from Delagoa, still
stood the huts and wagons of the Reverend Mr. Owen. I asked Kambula
whether he and his people were also dead.

“No, _Inkoos_,” he answered; “they are of the Children of George, as
you are, and therefore the king has spared them, although he is going
to send them out of the country.”

This was good news, so far as it went, and I asked again if Thomas
Halstead had also been spared, since he, too, was an Englishman.

“No,” said Kambula. “The king wished to save him, but he killed two of
our people and was dragged off with the rest. When the slayers got to
their work it was too late to stay their hands.”

Again I asked whether I might not join Mr. Owen and trek with him, to
which Kambula answered briefly:

“No, Macumazahn; the king’s orders are that you must go by yourself.”

So I went; nor did I ever again meet Mr. Owen or any of his people. I
believe, however, that they reached Durban safely and sailed away in a
ship called the _Comet_.

In a little while we came to the two milk trees by the main gate of the
kraal, where much of our saddlery still lay scattered about, though the
guns had gone. Here Kambula asked me if I could recognise my own
saddle.

“There it is,” I answered, pointing to it; “but what is the use of a
saddle without a horse?”

“The horse you rode has been kept for you, Macumazahn,” he replied.

Then he ordered one of the men with us to bring the saddle and bridle,
also some other articles which I selected, such as a couple of
blankets, a water-bottle, two tins containing coffee and sugar, a
little case of medicines, and so forth.

About a mile further on I found one of my horses tethered by an
outlying guard hut, and noted that it had been well fed and cared for.
By Kambula’s leave I saddled it and mounted. As I did so, he warned me
that if I tried to ride away from the escort I should certainly be
killed, since even if I escaped them, orders had been given throughout
the land to put an end to me should I be seen alone.

I replied that, unarmed as I was, I had no idea of making any such
attempt. So we went forward, Kambula and his soldiers walking or
trotting at my side.

For four full days we journeyed thus, keeping, so far as I could judge,
about twenty or thirty miles to the east of that road by which I had
left Zululand before and re-entered it with Retief and his commission.
Evidently I was an object of great interest to the Zulus of the country
through which we passed, perhaps because they knew me to be the sole
survivor of all the white men who had gone up to visit the king. They
would come down in crowds from the kraals and stare at me almost with
awe, as though I were a spirit and not a man. Only, not one of them
would say anything to me, probably because they had been forbidden to
do so. Indeed, if I spoke to any of them, invariably they turned and
walked or ran out of hearing.

It was on the evening of the fourth day that Kambula and his soldiers
received some news which seemed to excite them a great deal. A
messenger in a state of exhaustion, who had an injury to the fleshy
part of his left arm, which looked to me as though it had been caused
by a bullet, appeared out of the bush and said something of which, by
straining my ears, I caught two words—“Great slaughter.” Then Kambula
laid his fingers on his lips as a signal for silence and led the man
away, nor did I see or hear any more of him. Afterwards I asked Kambula
who had suffered this great slaughter, whereon he stared at me
innocently and replied that he did not know of what I was speaking.

“What is the use of lying to me, Kambula, seeing that I shall find out
the truth before long?”

“Then, Macumazahn, wait till you do find it out, and may it please
you,” he replied, and went off to speak with his people at a distance.

All that night I heard them talking off and on—I, who lay awake plunged
into new miseries. I was sure that some other dreadful thing had
happened. Probably Dingaan’s armies had destroyed all the Boers, and,
if so, oh! what had become of Marie? Was she dead, or had she perhaps
been taken prisoner, as Dingaan had told me would be done for his own
vile purposes? For aught I knew she might now be travelling under
escort to Umgungundhlovu, as I was travelling to Natal.

The morning came at last, and that day, about noon, we reached a ford
of the Tugela which luckily was quite passable. Here Kambula bade me
farewell, saying that his mission was finished. Also he delivered to me
a message that I was to give from Dingaan to the English in Natal. It
was to this effect: That he, Dingaan, had killed the Boers who came to
visit him because he found out that they were traitors to their chief,
and therefore not worthy to live. But that he loved the Sons of George,
who were true-hearted people, and therefore had nothing to fear from
him. Indeed, he begged them to come and see him at his Great Place,
where he would talk matters over with them.

I said that I would deliver the message if I met any English people,
but, of course, I could not say whether they would accept Dingaan’s
invitation to Umgungundhlovu. Indeed, I feared lest that town might
have acquired such a bad name that they would prefer not to come there
without an army.

Then, before Kambula had time to take any offence, I shook his
outstretched hand and urged my horse into the stream. I never met
Kambula again living, though after the battle of Blood River I saw him
dead.

Once over the Tugela I rode forward for half a mile or so till I was
clear of the bush and reeds that grew down to the water, fearing lest
the Zulus should follow and take me back to Dingaan to explain my
rather imprudent message. Seeing no signs of them, I halted, a desolate
creature in a desolate country which I did not know, wondering what I
should do and whither I should ride. Then it was that there happened
one of the strangest experiences of all my adventurous life.

As I sat dejectedly upon my horse, which was also dejected, amidst some
tumbled rocks that at a distant period in the world’s history had
formed the bank of the great river, I heard a voice which seemed
familiar to me say:

“Baas, is that _you_, baas?”

I looked round and could see no one, so, thinking that I had been
deceived by my imagination, I held my peace.

“Baas,” said the voice again, “are you dead or are you alive? Because,
if you are dead, I don’t want to have anything to do with spooks until
I am obliged.”

Now I answered, “Who is it that speaks, and whence?” though, really, as
I could see no one, I thought that I must be demented.

The next moment my horse snorted and shied violently, and no wonder,
for out of a great ant-bear hole not five paces away appeared a yellow
face crowned with black wool, in which was set a broken feather. I
looked at the face and the face looked at me.

“Hans,” I said, “is it you? I thought that _you_ were killed with the
others.”

“And I thought that _you_ were killed with the others, baas. Are you
sure that you are alive?”

“What are you doing there, you old fool?” I asked.

“Hiding from the Zulus, baas. I heard them on the other bank, and then
saw a man on a horse crossing the river, and went to ground like a
jackal. I have had enough of Zulus.”

“Come out,” I said, “and tell me your story.”

He emerged, a thin and bedraggled creature, with nothing left on him
but the upper part of a pair of old trousers, but still Hans,
undoubtedly Hans. He ran to me, and seizing my foot, kissed it again
and again, weeping tears of joy and stuttering:

“Oh, baas, to think that I should find you who were dead, alive, and
find myself alive, too. Oh! baas, never again will I doubt about the
Big Man in the sky of whom your reverend father is so fond. For after I
had tried all our own spirits, and even those of my ancestors, and met
with nothing but trouble, I said the prayer that the reverend taught
us, asking for my daily bread because I am so very hungry. Then I
looked out of the hole and there you were. Have you anything to eat
about you, baas?”

As it chanced, in my saddle-bags I had some biltong that I had saved
against emergencies. I gave it to him, and he devoured it as a famished
hyena might do, tearing off the tough meat in lumps and bolting them
whole. When it was all gone he licked his fingers and his lips and
stood still staring at me.

“Tell me your story,” I repeated.

“Baas, I went to fetch the horses with the others, and ours had
strayed. I got up a tree to look for them. Then I heard a noise, and
saw that the Zulus were killing the Boers; so knowing that presently
they would kill us, too, I stopped in that tree, hiding myself as well
as I could in a stork’s nest. Well, they came and assegaied all the
other Totties, and stood under my tree cleaning their spears and
getting their breath, for one of my brothers had given them a good run.
But they never saw me, although I was nearly sick from fear on the top
of them. Indeed, I was sick, but into the nest.

“Well, I sat in that nest all day, though the sun cooked me like beef
on a stick; and when night came I got down and ran, for I knew it was
no good to stop to look for you, and ‘every man for himself when a
black devil is behind you,’ as your reverend father says. All night I
ran, and in the morning hid up in a hole. Then when night came again I
went on running. Oh! they nearly caught me once or twice, but never
quite, for I know how to hide, and I kept where men do not go. Only I
was hungry, hungry; yes, I lived on snails and worms, and grass like an
ox, till my middle ached. Still, at last I got across the river and
near to the camp.

“Then just before the day broke and I was saying, ‘Now, Hans, although
your heart is sad, your stomach will rejoice and sing,’ what did I see
but those Zulu devils, thousands of them, rush down on the camp and
kill all the poor Boers. Men and women and the little children, they
killed them by the hundred, till at last other Boers came and drove
them away, although they took all the cattle with them. Well, as I was
sure that they would come back, I did not stop there. I ran down to the
side of the river, and have been crawling about in the reeds for days,
living on the eggs of water-birds and a few small fish that I caught in
the pools, till this morning, when I heard the Zulus again and slipped
up here into this hole. Then you came and stood over the hole, and for
a long while I thought you were a ghost.

“But now we are together once more and all is right, just as what your
reverend father always said it would be with those who go to church on
Sunday, like me when there was nothing else to do.” And again he fell
to kissing my foot.

“Hans,” I said, “you saw the camp. Was the Missie Marie there?”

“Baas, how can I tell, who never went into it? But the wagon she slept
in was not there; no, nor that of the Vrouw Prinsloo or of the Heer
Meyer.”

“Thank God!” I gasped, then added: “Where were you trying to get to,
Hans, when you ran away from the camp?”

“Baas, I thought perhaps that the Missie and the Prinsloos and the
Meyers had gone to that fine farm which you pegged out, and that I
would go and see if they were there. Because if so, I was sure that
they would be glad to know that you were really dead, and give me some
food in payment for my news. But I was afraid to walk across the open
veld for fear lest the Zulus should see me and kill me. Therefore I
came round through the thick bush along the river, where one can only
travel slowly, especially if hollow,” and he patted his wasted stomach.

“But, Hans,” I asked, “are we near my farm where I set the men to build
the houses on the hill above the river?”

“Of course, baas. Has your brain gone soft that you cannot find your
way about the veld? Four, or at most five, hours on horseback, riding
slow, and you are there.”

“Come on, Hans,” I said, “and be quick, for I think that the Zulus are
not far behind.”

So we started, Hans hanging to my stirrup and guiding me, for I knew
well enough that although he had never travelled this road, his
instinct for locality would not betray a coloured man, who can find his
way across the pathless veld as surely as a buck or a bird of the air.

On we went over the rolling plain, and as we travelled I told him my
story, briefly enough, for my mind was too torn with fears to allow me
to talk much. He, too, told me more of his escape and adventures. Now I
understood what was that news which had so excited Kambula and his
soldiers. It was evident that the Zulu impis had destroyed a great
number of the Boers whom they found unprepared for attack, and then had
been driven off by reinforcements that arrived from other camps.

That was why I had been kept prisoner for all those days. Dingaan
feared lest I should reach Natal in time to warn his victims!




CHAPTER XX.
THE COURT-MARTIAL


One hour, two hours, three hours, and then suddenly from the top of a
rise the sight of the beautiful Mooi River winding through the plain
like a vast snake of silver, and there, in a loop of it, the
flat-crested koppie on which I had hoped to make my home. Had
hoped!—why should I not still hope? For aught I knew everything might
yet be well. Marie might have escaped the slaughter as I had done, and
if so, after all our troubles perchance many years of life and
happiness awaited us. Only it seemed too good to be true.

I flogged my horse, but the poor beast was tired out and could only
break into short canters, that soon lapsed to a walk again. But whether
it cantered or whether it walked, its hoofs seemed to beat out the
words—“Too good to be true!” Sometimes they beat them fast, and
sometimes they beat them slow, but always their message seemed the
same.

Hans, too, was outworn and weak from starvation. Also he had a cut upon
his foot which hampered him so much that at last he said I had better
go on alone; he would follow more slowly. Then I dismounted and set him
on the horse, walking by it myself.

Thus it came about that the gorgeous sunset was finished and the sky
had grown grey with night before we reached the foot of the koppie. Yet
the last rays of the sinking orb had shown me something as they died.
There on the slope of the hill stood some mud and wattle houses, such
as I had ordered to be built, and near to them several white-capped
wagons. Only I did not see any smoke rising from those houses as there
should have been at this hour of the day, when men cooked their evening
food. The moon would be up presently, I knew, but meanwhile it was dark
and the tired horse stumbled and floundered among the stones which lay
about at the foot of the hill.

I could bear it no longer.

“Hans,” I said, “do you stay here with the horse. I will creep to the
houses and see if any dwell there.”

“Be careful, baas,” he answered, “lest you should find Zulus, for those
black devils are all about.”

I nodded, for I could not speak, and then began the ascent. For several
hundred yards I crept from stone to stone, feeling my way, for the
Kaffir path that led to the little plateau where the spring was, above
which the shanties stood, ran at the other end of the hill. I struck
the spruit or rivulet that was fed by this spring, being guided to it
by the murmur of the water, and followed up its bank till I heard a
sound which caused me to crouch and listen.

I could not be sure because of the ceaseless babble of the brook, but
the sound seemed like that of sobs. While I waited the great moon
appeared suddenly above a bank of inky cloud, flooding the place with
light, and oh! by that light, looking more ethereal than woman I saw—I
saw Marie!

She stood not five paces from me, by the side of the stream, whither
she had come to draw water, for she held a vessel in her hand. She was
clothed in some kind of a black garment, such as widows wear, but made
of rough stuff, and above it her face showed white in the white rays of
the moon. Gazing at her from the shadow, I could even see the tears
running down her cheeks, for it was she who wept in this lonely place,
wept for one who would return no more.

My voice choked in my throat; I could not utter a single word. Rising
from behind a rock I moved towards her. She saw me and started, then
said in a thrilling whisper:

“Oh! husband, has God sent you to call me? I am ready, husband, I am
ready!” and she stretched out her arms wildly, letting fall the vessel,
that clanked upon the ground.

“Marie!” I gasped at length; and at that word the blood rushed to her
face and brow, and I saw her draw in her breath as though to scream.

“Hush!” I whispered. “It is I, Allan, who have escaped alive.”

The next thing I remember was that she lay in my arms.

“What has happened here?” I asked when I had told my tale, or some of
it.

“Nothing, Allan,” she answered. “I received your letter at the camp,
and we trekked away as you bade us, without telling the others why,
because you remember the Commandant Retief wrote to us not to do so. So
we were out of the great slaughter, for the Zulus did not know where we
had gone, and never followed us here, although I have heard that they
sought for me. My father and my cousin Hernan only arrived at the camp
two days after the attack, and discovering or guessing our
hiding-place—I know not which—rode on hither. They say they came to
warn the Boers to be careful, for they did not trust Dingaan, but were
too late. So they too were out of the slaughter, for, Allan, many, many
have been killed—they say five or six hundred, most of them women and
children. But thank God! many more escaped, since the men came in from
the other camps farther off and from their shooting parties, and drove
away the Zulus, killing them by scores.”

“Are your father and Pereira here now?” I asked.

“No, Allan. They learned of the massacre and that the Zulus were all
gone yesterday morning. Also they got the bad news that Retief and
everyone with him had been killed at Dingaan’s town, it is said through
the treachery of the English, who arranged with Dingaan that he should
kill them.”

“That is false,” I said; “but go on.”

“Then, Allan, they came and told me that I was a widow like many other
women—I who had never been a wife. Allan, Hernan said that I should not
grieve for you, as you deserved your fate, since you had been caught in
your own snare, being one of those who had betrayed the Boers. The
Vrouw Prinsloo answered to his face that he lied, and, Allan, I said
that I would never speak to him again until we met before the Judgment
Seat of God; nor will I do so.”

“But I will speak to him,” I muttered. “Well, where are they now?”

“They rode this morning back to the other Boers. I think they want to
bring a party of them here to settle, if they like this place, as it is
so easy to defend. They said they would return to-morrow, and that
meanwhile we were quite safe, as they had sure tidings that all the
Zulus were back over the Tugela, taking some of their wounded with
them, and also the Boer cattle as an offering to Dingaan. But come to
the house, Allan—our home that I had made ready for you as well as I
could. Oh! my God! our home on the threshold of which I believed you
would never set a foot. Yes, when the moon rose from that cloud I
believed it, and look, they are still quite close together. Hark, what
is that?”

I listened, and caught the sound of a horse’s hoofs stumbling among the
rocks.

“Don’t be frightened,” I answered; “it is only Hans with my horse. He
escaped also; I will tell you how afterwards.” And as I spoke he
appeared, a woebegone and exhausted object.

“Good day, missie,” he said with an attempt at cheerfulness. “Now you
should give me a fine dinner, for you see I have brought the baas back
safe to you. Did I not tell you, baas, that everything would come
right?”

Then he grew silent from exhaustion. Nor were we sorry, who at that
moment did not wish to listen to the poor fellow’s talk.

Something over two hours had gone by since the moon broke out from the
clouds. I had greeted the Vrouw Prinsloo and all my other friends, and
been received by them with rapture as one risen from the dead. If they
had loved me before, now a new gratitude was added to their love, since
had it not been for my warning they also must have made acquaintance
with the Zulu spears and perished. It was on their part of the camp
that the worst of the attack fell. Indeed, from those wagons hardly
anyone escaped.

I had told them all the story, to which they listened in dead silence.
Only when it was finished the Heer Meyer, whose natural gloom had been
deepened by all these events, said:

“Allemachte! but you have luck, Allan, to be left when everyone else is
taken. Now, did I not know you so well, like Hernan Pereira I should
think that you and that devil Dingaan had winked at each other.”

The Vrouw Prinsloo turned on him furiously.

“How dare you say such words, Carl Meyer?” she exclaimed. “Must Allan
always be insulted just because he is English, which he cannot help?
For my part, I think that if anyone winked at Dingaan it was the
stinkcat Pereira. Otherwise why did he come away before the killing and
bring that madman, Henri Marais, with him?”

“I don’t know, I am sure, aunt,” said Meyer humbly, for like everyone
else he was afraid of the Vrouw Prinsloo.

“Then why can’t you hold your tongue instead of saying silly things
which must give pain?” asked the vrouw. “No, don’t answer, for you will
only make matters worse; but take the rest of that meat to the poor
Hottentot, Hans”—I should explain that we had been supping—“who,
although he has eaten enough to burst any white stomach, I dare say can
manage another pound or two.”

Meyer obeyed meekly, and the others melted away also as they were wont
to do when the vrouw showed signs of war, so that she and we two were
left alone.

“Now,” said the vrouw, “everyone is tired, and I say that it is time to
go to rest. Good night, nephew Allan and niece Marie,” and she waddled
away leaving us together.

“Husband,” said Marie presently, “will you come and see the home that I
made ready for you before I thought that you were dead? It is a poor
place, but I pray God that we may be happy there,” and she took me by
the hand and kissed me once and twice and thrice.

About noon on the following day, when my wife and I were laughing and
arguing over some little domestic detail of our meagre establishment—so
soon are great griefs forgotten in an overwhelming joy, of a sudden I
saw her face change, and asked what was the matter.

“Hist!” she said, “I hear horses,” and she pointed in a certain
direction.

I looked, and there, round the corner of the hill, came a body of Boers
with their after-riders, thirty-two or three of them in all, of whom
twenty were white men.

“See,” said Marie, “my father is among them, and my cousin Hernan rides
at his side.”

It was true. There was Henri Marais, and just behind him, talking into
his ear, rode Hernan Pereira. I remember that the two of them reminded
me of a tale I had read about a man who was cursed with an evil genius
that drew him to some dreadful doom in spite of the promptings of his
better nature. The thin, worn, wild-eyed Marais, and the rich-faced,
carnal Pereira whispering slyly into his ear; they were exact types of
that man in the story and his evil genius who dragged him down to hell.
Prompted by some impulse, I threw my arms round Marie and embraced her,
saying:

“At least we have been very happy for a while.”

“What do you mean, Allan?” she asked doubtfully.

“Only that I think our good hours are done with for the present.”

“Perhaps,” she answered slowly; “but at least they have been very good
hours, and if I should die to-day I am glad to have lived to win them.”

Then the cavalcade of Boers came up.

Hernan Pereira, his senses sharpened perhaps by the instincts of hate
and jealousy, was the first to recognise me.

“Why, Mynheer Allan Quatermain,” he said, “how is it that you are here?
How is it that you still live? Commandant,” he added, turning to a
dark, sad-faced man of about sixty whom at that time I did not know,
“here is a strange thing. This Heer Quatermain, an Englishman, was with
the Governor Retief at the town of the Zulu king, as the Heer Henri
Marais can testify. Now, as we know for sure Pieter Retief and all his
people are dead, murdered by Dingaan, how then does it happen that this
man has escaped?”

“Why do you put riddles to me, Mynheer Pereira?” asked the dark Boer.
“Doubtless the Englishman will explain.”

“Certainly I will, mynheer,” I said. “Is it your pleasure that I should
speak now?”

The commandant hesitated. Then, having called Henri Marais apart and
talked to him for a little while, he replied:

“No, not now, I think; the matter is too serious. After we have eaten
we will listen to your story, Mynheer Quatermain, and meanwhile I
command you not to leave this place.”

“Do you mean that I am a prisoner, commandant?” I asked.

“If you put it so—yes, Mynheer Quatermain—a prisoner who has to explain
how some sixty of our brothers, who were your companions, came to be
butchered like beasts in Zululand, while you escaped. Now, no more
words; by and by doubtless there will be plenty of them. Here you,
Carolus and Johannes, keep watch upon this Englishman, of whom I hear
strange stories, with your guns loaded, please, and when we send to
you, lead him before us.”

“As usual, your cousin Hernan brings evil gifts,” I said to Marie
bitterly. “Well, let us also eat our dinner, which perhaps the Heeren
Carolus and Johannes will do us the honour to share—bringing their
loaded guns with them.”

Carolus and Johannes accepted the invitation, and from them we heard
much news, all of it terrible enough to learn, especially the details
of the massacre in that district, which, because of this fearful event
is now and always will be known as Weenen, or The Place of Weeping.
Suffice it to say that they were quite enough to take away all our
appetite, although Carolus and Johannes, who by this time had recovered
somewhat from the shock of that night of blood and terror, ate in a
fashion which might have filled Hans himself with envy.

Shortly after we had finished our meal, Hans, who, by the way, seemed
to have quite recovered from his fatigues, came to remove the dishes.
He informed us that all the Boers were having a great “talk,” and that
they were about to send for me. Sure enough, a few minutes later two
armed men arrived and ordered me to follow them. I turned to say some
words of farewell to Marie, but she said:

“I go where you do, husband,” and, as no objection was made by the
guard, she came.

About two hundred yards away, sitting under the shade of one of the
wagons, we found the Boers. Six of them were seated in a semicircle
upon stools or whatever they could find, the black-browed commandant
being in the centre and having in front of him a rough table on which
were writing materials.

To the left of these six were the Prinsloos and Meyers, being those
folk whom I had rescued from Delagoa, and to the right the other Boers
who had ridden into the camp that morning. I saw at a glance that a
court-martial had been arranged and that the six elders were the
judges, the commandant being the president of the court.

I do not give their names purposely, since I have no wish that the
actual perpetrators of the terrible blunder that I am about to describe
should be known to posterity. After all, they acted honestly according
to their lights, and were but tools in the hand of that villain Hernan
Pereira.

“Allan Quatermain,” said the commandant, “you are brought here to be
tried by a court-martial duly constituted according to the law
published in the camps of the emigrant Boers. Do you acknowledge that
law?”

“I know that there is such a law, commandant,” I answered, “but I do
not acknowledge the authority of your court-martial to try a man who is
no Boer, but a subject of the Queen of Great Britain.”

“We have considered that point, Allan Quatermain,” said the commandant,
“and we disallow it. You will remember that in the camp at Bushman’s
River, before you rode with the late Pieter Retief to the chief
Sikonyela, when you were given command of the Zulus who went with him,
you took an oath to interpret truly and to be faithful in all things to
the General Retief, to his companions and to his cause. That oath we
hold gives this court jurisdiction over you.”

“I deny your jurisdiction,” I answered, “although it is true that I
took an oath to interpret faithfully, and I request that a note of my
denial may be made in writing.”

“It shall be done,” said the commandant, and laboriously he made the
note on the paper before him.

When he had finished he looked up and said: “The charge against you,
Allan Quatermain, is that, being one of the commission who recently
visited the Zulu king Dingaan, under command of the late Governor and
General Pieter Retief, you did falsely and wickedly urge the said
Dingaan to murder the said Pieter Retief and his companions, and
especially Henri Marais, your father-in-law, and Hernando Pereira, his
nephew, with both of whom you had a quarrel. Further, that afterwards
you brought about the said murder, having first arranged with the king
of the Zulus that you should be removed to a place of safety while it
was done. Do you plead Guilty or Not guilty?”

Now when I heard this false and abominable charge my rage and
indignation caused me to laugh aloud.

“Are you mad, commandant,” I exclaimed, “that you should say such
things? On what evidence is this wicked lie advanced against me?”

“No, Allan Quatermain, I am not mad,” he replied, “although it is true
that through your evil doings I, who have lost my wife and three
children by the Zulu spears, have suffered enough to make me mad. As
for the evidence against you, you shall hear it. But first I will write
down that you plead Not guilty.”

He did so, then said:

“If you will acknowledge certain things it will save us all much time,
of which at present we have little to spare. Those things are that
knowing what was going to happen to the commission, you tried to avoid
accompanying it. Is that true?”

“No,” I answered. “I knew nothing of what was going to happen to the
commission, though I feared something, having but just saved my friends
there”—and I pointed to the Prinsloos—“from death at the hands of
Dingaan. I did not wish to accompany it for another reason: that I had
been married on the day of its starting to Marie Marais. Still, I went
after all because the General Retief, who was my friend, asked me to
come, to interpret for him.”

Now some of the Boers present said:

“That is true. We remember.”

But the commandant continued, taking no heed of my answer or these
interruptions.

“Do you acknowledge that you were on bad terms with Henri Marais and
with Hernan Pereira?”

“Yes,” I answered; “because Henri Marais did all in his power to
prevent my marriage with his daughter Marie, behaving very ill to me
who had saved his life and that of his people who remained to him up by
Delagoa, and afterwards at Umgungundhlovu. Because, too, Hernan Pereira
strove to rob me of Marie, who loved me. Moreover, although I had saved
him when he lay sick to death, he afterwards tried to murder me by
shooting me down in a lonely place. Here is the mark of it,” and I
touched the little scar upon the side of my forehead.

“That is true; he did so, the stinkcat,” shouted the Vrouw Prinsloo,
and was ordered to be silent.

“Do you acknowledge,” went on the commandant, “that you sent to warn
your wife and those with her to depart from the camp on the Bushman’s
River, because it was going to be attacked, charging them to keep the
matter secret, and that afterwards both you and your Hottentot servant
alone returned safely from Zululand, where all those who went with you
lie dead?”

“I acknowledge,” I answered, “that I wrote to tell my wife to come to
this place where I had been building houses, as you see, and to bring
with her any of our companions who cared to trek here, or, failing
that, to go alone. This I did because Dingaan had told me, whether in
jest or in earnest I did not know, that he had given orders that my
said wife should be kidnapped, as he desired to make her one of his
women, having thought her beautiful when he saw her. Also what I did
was done with the knowledge and by the wish of the late Governor
Retief, as can be shown by his writing on my letter. I acknowledge also
that I escaped when all my brothers were killed, as did the Hottentot
Hans, and if you wish to know I will tell you how we escaped and why.”

The commandant made a further note, then he said:

“Let the witness Hernan Pereira be called and sworn.”

This was done and he was ordered to tell his tale.

As may be imagined, it was a long tale, and one that had evidently been
prepared with great care. I will only set down its blackest falsehoods.
He assured the court that he had no enmity against me and had never
attempted to kill me or do me any harm, although it was true that his
heart felt sore because, against her father’s will, I had stolen away
the affection of his betrothed, who was now my wife. He said that he
had stopped in Zululand because he knew that I should marry her as soon
as she came of age, and it was too great pain for him to see this done.
He said that while he was there, before the arrival of the commission,
Dingaan and some of his captains had told him that I had again and
again urged him, Dingaan, to kill the Boers because they were traitors
to the sovereign of England, but that he, Dingaan, had refused to do
so. He said that when Retief came up with the commission he tried to
warn him against me, but that Retief would not listen, being infatuated
with me as many others were, and he looked towards the Prinsloos.

Then came the worst of all. He said that while he was engaged in
mending some guns for Dingaan in one of his private huts, he overheard
a conversation between myself and Dingaan which took place outside the
hut, I, of course, not knowing that he was within. The substance of
this conversation was that I again urged Dingaan to kill the Boers and
afterwards to send an impi to massacre their wives and families. Only I
asked him to give me time to get away a girl whom I had married from
among them, and with her a few of my own friends whom I wished should
be spared, as I intended to become a kind of chief over them, and if he
would grant it me, to hold all the land of Natal under his rule and the
protection of the English. To these proposals Dingaan answered that
“they seemed wise and good, and that he would think them over very
carefully.”

Pereira said further that coming out of the hut after Dingaan had gone
away he reproached me bitterly for my wickedness, and announced that he
would warn the Boers, which he did subsequently by word of mouth and in
writing. That thereon I caused him to be detained by the Zulus while I
went to Retief and told him some false story about him, Pereira, which
caused Retief to drive him out of his camp and give orders that none of
the Boers should so much as speak to him. That then he did the only
thing he could. Going to his uncle, Henri Marais, he told him, not all
the truth, but that he had learnt for certain that his daughter Marie
was in dreadful danger of her life because of some intended attack of
the Zulus, and that all the Boers among whom she dwelt were also in
danger of their lives.

Therefore he suggested to Henri Marais that as the General Retief was
besotted and would not listen to his story, the best thing they could
do was to ride away and warn the Boers. This then they did secretly,
without the knowledge of Retief, but being delayed upon their journey
by one accident and another, which he set out in detail, they only
reached the Bushman’s River too late, after the massacre had taken
place. Subsequently, as the commandant knew, hearing a rumour that
Marie Marais and other Boers had trekked to this place before the
slaughter, they came here and learned that they had done so upon a
warning sent to them by Allan Quatermain, whereon they returned and
communicated the news to the surviving Boers at Bushman’s River.

That was all he had to say.

Then, as I reserved my cross-examination until I heard all the evidence
against me, Henri Marais was sworn and corroborated his nephew’s
testimony on many points as to my relations to his daughter, his
objection to my marriage to her because I was an Englishman whom he
disliked and mistrusted, and so forth. He added further that it was
true Pereira had told him he had sure information that Marie and the
Boers were in danger from an attack upon them which had been arranged
between Allan Quatermain and Dingaan; that he also had written to
Retief and tried to speak to him but was refused a hearing. Thereon he
had ridden away from Umgungundhlovu to try to save his daughter and
warn the Boers. That was all he had to say.

As there were no further witnesses for the prosecution I cross-examined
these two at full length, but absolutely without results, since every
vital question that I asked was met with a direct negative.

Then I called my witnesses, Marie, whose evidence they refused to hear
on the ground that she was my wife and prejudiced, the Vrouw Prinsloo
and her family, and the Meyers. One and all told a true story of my
relations with Hernan Pereira, Henri Marais, and Dingaan, so far as
they knew them.

After this, as the commandant declined to take the evidence of Hans
because he was a Hottentot and my servant, I addressed the court,
relating exactly what had taken place between me and Dingaan, and how I
and Hans came to escape on our second visit to his kraal. I pointed out
also that unhappily for myself I could not prove my words, since
Dingaan was not available as a witness, and all the others were dead.
Further, I produced my letter to Marie, which was endorsed by Retief,
and the letter to Retief signed by Marais and Pereira which remained in
my possession.

By the time that I had finished my speech the sun was setting and
everyone was tired out. I was ordered to withdraw under guard, while
the court consulted, which it did for a long while. Then I was called
forward again and the commandant said:

“Allan Quatermain, after prayer to God we have considered this case to
the best of our judgment and ability. On the one hand we note that you
are an Englishman, a member of a race which hates and has always
oppressed our people, and that it was to your interest to get rid of
two of them with whom you had quarrelled. The evidence of Henri Marais
and Hernan Pereira, which we cannot disbelieve, shows that you were
wicked enough, either in order to do this, or because of your malice
against the Boer people, to plot their destruction with a savage. The
result is that some seven hundred men, women, and children have lost
their lives in a very cruel manner, whereas you, your servant, your
wife and your friends have alone escaped unharmed. For such a crime as
this a hundred deaths could not pay; indeed, God alone can give to it
its just punishment, and to Him it is our duty to send you to be
judged. We condemn you to be shot as a traitor and a murderer, and may
He have mercy on your soul.”

At these dreadful words Marie fell to the ground fainting and a pause
ensued while she was carried off to the Prinsloos’ house, whither the
vrouw followed to attend her. Then the commandant went on:

“Still, although we have thus passed judgment on you; because you are
an Englishman against whom it might be said that we had prejudices, and
because you have had no opportunity of preparing a defence, and no
witnesses to the facts, since all those whom you say you could have
called are dead, we think it right that this unanimous sentence of ours
should be confirmed by a general court of the emigrant Boers. Therefore
to-morrow morning you will be taken with us to the Bushman’s River
camp, where the case will be settled, and, if necessary, execution done
in accordance with the verdict of the generals and veld-cornets of that
camp. Meanwhile you will be kept in custody in your own house. Now have
you anything to say against this sentence?”

“Yes, this,” I answered, “that although you do not know it, it is an
unjust sentence, built up on the lies of one who has always been my
enemy, and of a man whose brain is rotten. I never betrayed the Boers.
If anyone betrayed them it was Hernan Pereira himself, who, as I proved
to the General Retief, had been praying Dingaan to kill me, and whom
Retief threatened to put upon his trial for this very crime, for which
reason and no other Pereira fled from the kraal, taking his tool Henri
Marais with him. You have asked God to judge me. Well, I ask God to
judge him and Henri Marais also, and I know He will in one way or
another. As for me, I am ready to die, as I have been for months while
serving the cause of you Boers. Shoot me now if you will, and make an
end. But I tell you that if I escape your hands I will not suffer this
treatment to go unpunished. I will lay my case before the rulers of my
people, and if necessary before my Queen, yes, if I have to travel to
London to do it, and you Boers shall learn that you cannot condemn an
innocent Englishman upon false testimony and not pay the price. I tell
you that price shall be great if I live, and if I die it shall be
greater still.”

Now these words, very foolish words, I admit, which being young and
inexperienced I spoke in my British pride, I could see made a great
impression upon my judges. They believed, to be fair to them, that they
had passed a just sentence. Blinded by prejudice and falsehood, and
maddened by the dreadful losses their people had suffered during the
past few days at the hands of a devilish savage, they believed that I
was the instigator of those losses, one who ought to die. Indeed, all,
or nearly all the Boers were persuaded that Dingaan was urged to this
massacre by the counsels of Englishmen. The mere fact of my own and my
servant’s miraculous escape, when all my companions had perished,
proved my guilt to them without the evidence of Pereira, which, being
no lawyers, they thought sufficient to justify their verdict.

Still, they had an uneasy suspicion that this evidence was not
conclusive, and might indeed be rejected _in toto_ by a more competent
court upon various grounds. Also they knew themselves to be rebels who
had no legal right to form a court, and feared the power of the long
arm of England, from which for a little while they had escaped. If I
were allowed to tell my tale to the Parliament in London, what might
not happen to them, they wondered—to them who had ventured to pass
sentence of death upon a subject of the Queen of Great Britain? Might
not this turn the scale against them? Might not Britain arise in wrath
and crush them, these men who dared to invoke her forms of law in order
to kill her citizen? Those, as I learned afterwards, were the thoughts
that passed through their minds.

Also another thought passed through their minds—that if the sentence
were executed at once, a dead man cannot appeal, and that here I had no
friends to take up my cause and avenge me. But of all this they said
nothing. Only at a sign I was marched away to my little house and
imprisoned under guard.

Now I propose to tell the rest of the history of these tragic events as
they happened, although some of them did not come to my knowledge till
the morrow or afterwards, for I think this will be the more simple and
the easier plan.




CHAPTER XXI.
THE INNOCENT BLOOD


After I had been taken away it seems that the court summoned Hernan
Pereira and Henri Marais to accompany them to a lonely spot at a
distance, where they thought that their deliberations would not be
overheard. In this, however, they were mistaken, having forgotten the
fox-like cunning of the Hottentot, Hans. Hans had heard me sentenced,
and probably enough feared that he who also had committed the crime of
escaping from Dingaan, might be called on to share that sentence. Also
he wished to know the secret counsel of these Boers, whose language, of
course, he understood as well as he did his own.

So making a circuit up the hillside, he crept towards them on his belly
as a snake creeps, wriggling in and out between the tufts of last
year’s dead grass, which grew here in plenty, without so much as moving
their tops. At length he lay still in the centre of a bush that grew
behind a stone not five paces from where they were talking, whence he
listened intently to every word that passed their lips.

This was the substance of their talk; that for the reasons I have
already mentioned it would be best that I should die at once. Sentence,
said the commandant, had been passed, and could not be rescinded, since
even if it were, their offence would remain as heavy in the eyes of the
English authorities. But if they took me to their main camp to be
re-tried by their great council, possibly that sentence might be
rescinded and they be left individually and collectively to atone for
what they had done. Also they knew that I was very clever and might
escape in some other way to bring the English, or possibly the Zulus,
upon them, since they felt convinced that Dingaan and I were working
together for their destruction, and that while I had breath in my body
I should never cease my efforts to be avenged.

When it was found that they were all of one mind in this matter, the
question arose: What should be done? Somebody suggested that I should
be shot at once, but the commandant pointed out that such a deed,
worked at night, would look like murder, especially as it violated the
terms of their verdict.

Then another suggestion was made: that I should be brought out of my
house just before the dawn on pretence that it was time to ride; that
then I should be given the opportunity of escape and instantly shot
down. Or it might be pretended that I had tried to escape, with a like
result. Who, they urged, was to know in that half-light whether I had
or had not actually attempted to run for my life, or to threaten their
lives, circumstances under which the law said it was justifiable to
shoot a prisoner already formally condemned to death?

To this black counsel they all agreed, being so terribly afraid of a
poor English lad whose existence, although most of them did not know
this, was to be taken from him upon false evidence. But then arose
another question: By whose hand should the thing be done? Not one of
them, it would seem, was anxious to fulfil this bloody office; indeed,
they one and all refused to do so. A proposal was put forward that some
of their native servants should be forced to serve as executioners; but
when this had been vetoed by the general sense of the court, their
counsels came to a deadlock.

Then, after a whispered conference, the commandant spoke some dreadful
words.

“Hernando Pereira and Henri Marais,” he said, “it is on your evidence
that this young man has been condemned. We believe that evidence, but
if by one jot or one tittle it is false, then not justice, but a foul
murder will have been committed and his innocent blood will be upon
your heads for ever. Hernando Pereira and Henri Marais, the court
appoints you to be the guards who will bring the prisoner out of his
house to-morrow morning just when the sky begins to lighten. It is from
_you_ that he will try to escape, and _you_ will prevent his escape by
his death. Then you must join us where we shall be waiting for you and
report the execution.”

When Henri Marais heard this he exclaimed:

“I swear by God that I cannot do it. Is it right or natural that a man
should be forced to kill his own son-in-law?”

“You could bear evidence against your own son-in-law, Henri Marais,”
answered the stern-faced commandant. “Why then cannot you kill with
your rifle one whom you have already helped to kill with your tongue?”

“I will not, I cannot!” said Marais, tearing at his beard. But the
commandant only answered coldly:

“You have the orders of the court, and if you choose to disobey them we
shall begin to believe that you have sworn falsely. Then you and your
nephew will also appear before the great council when the Englishman is
tried again. Still, it matters nothing to us whether you or Hernando
Pereira shall fire the shot. See you to it, as the Jews said to Judas
who had betrayed the innocent Lord.”

Then he paused and went on, addressing Pereira:

“Do you also refuse, Hernando Pereira? Remember before you answer that
if you do refuse we shall draw our own conclusions. Remember, too, that
the evidence which you have given, showing that this wicked Englishman
plotted and caused the deaths of our brothers and of our wives and
children, which we believe to be true evidence, shall be weighed and
investigated word by word before the great council.”

“To give evidence is one thing, and to shoot the traitor and murderer
another,” said Pereira. Then he added with an oath, or so vowed Hans:
“Yet why should I, who know all this villain’s guilt, refuse to carry
out the sentence of the law on him? Have no fear, commandant, the
accursed Allan Quatermain shall not succeed in his attempt to escape
to-morrow before the dawn.”

“So be it,” said the commandant. “Now, do all you who have heard those
words take note of them.”

Then Hans, seeing that the council was about to break up, and fearing
lest he should be caught and killed, slipped away by the same road that
he had come. His thought was to warn me, but this he could not do
because of the guards. So he went to the Prinsloos, and finding the
vrouw alone with Marie, who had recovered her mind, told them
everything that he had heard.

As he said, Marie knelt down and prayed, or thought for a long while,
then rose and spoke.

“Tante,” she said to the vrouw, “one thing is clear, that Allan will be
murdered at the dawn; now if he is hidden away he may escape.”

“But where and how can we hide him,” asked the vrouw, “seeing that the
place is guarded?”

“Tante,” said Marie again, “at the back of your house is an old cattle
kraal made by Kaffirs, and in that cattle kraal, as I have seen, there
are mealie-pits where those Kaffirs stored their grain. Now I suggest
that we should put my husband into one of those mealie-pits and cover
it over. There the Boers might not find him, however close they
searched.”

“That is a good idea,” said the vrouw; “but how in the name of God are
we to get Allan out of a guarded house into a mealie-pit?”

“Tante, I have a right to go to my husband’s house, and there I will
go. Afterwards, too, I shall have the right to leave his house before
he is taken away. Well, he might leave it in my place, _as me_, and you
and Hans might help him. Then in the morning the Boers would come to
search the house and find no one except me.”

“That is all very pretty,” answered the vrouw; “but do you think, my
niece, that those accursed vultures will go away until they have picked
Allan’s bones? Not they, for too much hangs on it. They will know that
he cannot be far off, and slink about the place until they have found
him in his mealie-hole or until he comes out. It is blood they are
after, thanks to your cousin Hernan, the liar, and blood they will have
for their own safety’s sake. Never will they go away from here until
they see Allan lying dead upon the ground.”

Now, according to Hans, Marie thought again very deeply. Then she
answered:

“There is a great risk, tante; but we must take it. Send your husband
to chat with those guards, and give him a bottle of spirits. I will
talk with Hans here and see what can be arranged.”

So Marie went aside with Hans, as he told me afterwards, and asked him
if he knew of any medicine that made people sleep for a long while
without waking. He answered, Yes; all the coloured people had plenty of
such medicine. Without doubt he could get some from the Kaffirs who
dwelt upon the place, or if not he could dig the roots of a plant that
he had seen growing near by which would serve the purpose. So she sent
him to procure this stuff. Afterwards she spoke to the Vrouw Prinsloo,
saying:

“My plan is that Allan should escape from our house disguised as
myself. But as I know well that he will not run away while he has his
senses, seeing that to do so in his mind would be to confess his guilt,
I propose to take his senses from him by means of a drugged drink. Then
I propose that you and Hans should carry him into the shadow of this
house, and when no one is looking, to the old grain-pit that lies but a
few yards away, covering the mouth of it with dead grass. There he will
remain till the Boers grow tired of searching for him and ride away. Or
if it should chance that they find him, he will be no worse off than he
was before.”

“A good plan enough, Marie, though not one that Allan would have
anything to do with if he kept his wits,” answered the vrouw, “seeing
that he was always a man for facing things out, although so young in
years. Still, we will try to save him in spite of himself from the
claws of that stinkcat Pereira, whom may God curse, and his tool, your
father. As you say, at the worst no harm will be done even if they find
him, as probably they will, seeing that they will not leave this place
without blood.”

Such then was the trick which Marie arranged with the Vrouw Prinsloo.
Or rather, I should say, seemed to arrange, since she told her nothing
of her real mind, she who knew that the vrouw was right and that for
their own sakes, as well as because they believed it to be justice, the
Boers would never leave that place until they saw blood running on the
grass.

This, oh! this was Marie’s true and dreadful plan—_to give her life for
mine!_ She was sure that once he had slain his victim, Hernan Pereira
would not stop to make examination of the corpse. He would ride away,
hounded by his guilty conscience, and meanwhile I could escape.

She never thought the thing out in all its details, she who was
maddened with terror and had no time. She only felt her way from step
to step, dimly seeing my deliverance at the end of the journey. Marie
told the Vrouw Prinsloo nothing, except that she proposed to drug me if
I would not go undrugged. Then the vrouw must hide me as best she
could, in the grain-pit or elsewhere, or, if I had my senses about me,
let me hide myself. Afterwards she, Marie, would face the Boers and
tell them to find me if they wanted me.

The vrouw answered that she had now thought of a better plan. It was
that she should arrange with her husband and son and the Meyers, all of
whom loved me, that they should rescue me, or if need be, kill or
disable Pereira before he could shoot me.

Marie replied that this was good if it could be done, and the vrouw
went out to find her husband and the other men. Presently, however, she
returned with a long face, saying that the commandant had them all
under guard. It seemed that it had occurred to him, or more probably to
Pereira, that the Prinsloos and the Meyers, who looked on me as a
brother, might attempt some rescue, or make themselves formidable in
other ways. Therefore, as a matter of precaution, they had been put
under arrest and their arms taken from them as mine had been. What the
commandant said, however, was that he took these somewhat high-handed
measures in order to be sure that they, the Prinsloos and the Meyers,
should be ready on the following morning to ride with him and the
prisoner to the main camp, where the great council might wish to
interrogate them.

One concession, however, the vrouw had won from the commandant, who,
knowing what was about to happen to me, had not, I suppose, the heart
to refuse. It was that my wife and she might visit me and give me food
on the stipulation that they both left the house where I was confined
by ten o’clock that night.

So it came to this, that if anything was to be done, these two women
and a Hottentot must do it, since they could hope for no help in their
plans. Here I should add that the vrouw told Marie in Hans’s presence
that she had thought of attacking the commandant as to this matter of
my proposed shooting by Pereira. On reflection, however, she refrained
for two reasons, first because she feared lest she might only make
matters worse and rob me of my sole helpers, and secondly for fear lest
she should bring about the death of Hans, to whom the story would
certainly be traced.

As he was the solitary witness to the plot, it seemed to her that he
would scarcely be allowed to escape to repeat it far and wide.
Especially was this so, as the unexplained death of a Hottentot,
suspected of treachery like his master, was not a matter that would
have been thought worth notice in those rough and bloody times. She may
have been right, or she may have been wrong, but in weighing her
decision it must always be borne in mind that she was, and until the
end remained, in utter ignorance of Marie’s heroic design to go to her
death in place of me.

So the two women and the Hottentot proceeded to mature the plans which
I have outlined. One other alternative, however, Hans did suggest. It
was that they should try to drug the guards with some of the medicated
drink that was meant for me, and that then Marie, I and he should slip
away and get down to the river, there to hide in the weeds. Thence,
perhaps, we might escape to Port Natal where lived Englishmen who would
protect us.

Of course this idea was hopeless from the first. The moonlight was
almost as bright as day, and the veld quite open for a long way round,
so that we should certainly have been seen and re-captured, which of
course would have meant instant death. Further, as it happened, the
guards had been warned against touching liquor of any sort since it was
thought probable that an attempt would be made to intoxicate them.
Still the women determined to try this scheme if they could find a
chance. At least it was a second string to their bow.

Meanwhile they made their preparations. Hans went away for a little and
returned with a supply of his sleep-producing drug, though whether he
got this from the Kaffirs or gathered it himself, I do not remember, if
I ever heard. At any rate it was boiled up in the water with which they
made the coffee that I was to drink, though not in that which Marie
proposed to drink with me, the strong taste and black hue of the coffee
effectually hiding any flavour or colour that there might be in the
herb. Also the vrouw cooked some food which she gave to Hans to carry.
First, however, he went to investigate the old mealie-pit which was
within a few paces of the back door of the Prinsloos’ house. He
reported that it would do well to hide a man in, especially as tall
grass and bushes grew about its mouth.

Then the three of them started, and arriving at the door of my house,
which was about a hundred yards away, were of course challenged by the
sentries.

“Heeren,” said Marie, “the commandant has given us leave to bring food
to my husband, whom you guard within. Pray do not prevent us from
entering.”

“No,” answered one of them gently enough, for he was touched with pity
at her plight. “We have our orders to admit you, the Vrouw Prinsloo and
the native servant, though why three of you should be needed to carry
food to one man, I don’t know. I should have thought that at such a
time he would have preferred to be alone with his wife.”

“The Vrouw Prinsloo wishes to ask my husband certain questions about
his property here and what is to be done while he and her men are away
at the main camp for the second trial, as I, whose heart is full of
sorrow, have no head for such things. Also the Hottentot must have
orders as to where he is to get a horse to ride with him, so pray let
us pass, mynheer.”

“Very good; it is no affair of ours, Vrouw Quatermain— Stay, I suppose
that you have no arms under that long cloak of yours.”

“Search me, if you will, mynheer,” she answered, opening the cloak,
whereon, after a quick glance, he nodded and bade them enter, saying:

“Mind, you are to come out by ten o’clock. You must not pass the night
in that house, or we shall have the little Englishman oversleeping
himself in the morning.”

Then they entered and found me seated at a table preparing notes for my
defence and setting down the heads of the facts of my relations with
Pereira, Dingaan, and the late Commandant Retief.

Here I may state that my condition at the time was not one of fear, but
rather of burning indignation. Indeed, I had not the slightest doubt
but that when my case was re-tried before the great council, I should
be able to establish my complete innocence of the abominable charges
that had been brought against me. Therefore it came about that when
Marie suggested that I should try to escape, I begged her almost
roughly not to mention such a thing again.

“Run away!” I said. “Why, that would be to confess myself guilty, for
only the guilty run away. What I want is to have all this business
thrashed out and that devil Pereira exposed.”

“But, Allan,” said Marie, “how if you should never live to have it
thrashed out? How if you should be shot first?” Then she rose, and
having looked to see that the shutter-board was fast in the little
window-place and the curtain that she had made of sacking drawn over
it, returned and whispered: “Hans here has heard a horrible tale,
Allan. Tell it to the baas, Hans.”

So while Vrouw Prinsloo, in order to deceive any prying eyes if such by
chance could see us, busied herself with lighting a fire on the hearth
in the second room on which to warm the food, Hans told his story much
as it has already been set out.

I listened to it with growing incredulity. The thing seemed to me
impossible. Either Hans was deceived or lying, the latter probably, for
well I knew the Hottentot powers of imagination. Or perhaps he was
drunk; indeed, he smelt of liquor, of which I was aware he could carry
a great quantity without outward signs of intoxication.

“I cannot believe it,” I said when he had finished. “Even if Pereira is
such a fiend, as is possible, would Henri Marais, your father—who, at
any rate, has always been a good and God-fearing man—consent to work
such a crime upon his daughter’s husband, though he does dislike him?”

“My father is not what he was, Allan,” said Marie. “Sometimes I think
that his brain has gone.”

“He did not speak like a man whose brain has gone this afternoon,” I
replied. “But let us suppose that this tale is true, what is it that
you wish me to do?”

“Allan, I wish you to dress up in my clothes and get away to a
hiding-place which Hans and the vrouw know, leaving me here instead of
you.”

“Why, Marie?” I said. “Then you might get yourself shot in my place,
always supposing that they mean to shoot me. Also I should certainly be
caught and killed, as they would have a right to kill me for trying to
escape in disguise. That is a mad plan, and I have a better. Vrouw
Prinsloo, go straight to the commandant and tell him all this story.
Or, if he will not listen to you, scream it out at the top of your
voice so that everyone may hear, and then come back and tell us the
result. Of one thing I am sure, that if you do this, even if there was
any thought of my being shot tomorrow morning, it will be abandoned.
You can refuse to say who told you the tale.”

“Yes, please do that,” muttered Hans, “else I know one who will be
shot.”

“Good, I will go,” said the vrouw, and she went, the guards letting her
pass after a few words which we could not hear.

Half an hour later she returned and called to us to open the door.

“Well?” I asked.

“Well,” she said, “I have failed, nephew. Except those sentries outside
the door, the commandant and all the Boers have ridden off, I know not
where, taking our people with them.”

“That’s odd,” I answered, “but I suppose they thought they had not
enough grass for their horses, or Heaven knows what they thought. Stay
now, I will do something,” and, opening the door, I called to the
guards, honest fellows in their way, whom I had known in past times.

“Listen, friends,” I said. “A tale has been brought to me that I am not
to be taken to the big camp to have my case inquired of by the council,
but am to be shot down in cold blood when I come out of this house
to-morrow morning. Is that true?”

“Allemachte, Englishman!” answered one of them. “Do you take us for
murderers? Our orders are to lead you to the commandant wherever he may
appoint, so have no fear that we shall shoot you like a Kaffir. Either
you or they who told you such a story are mad.”

“So I thought, friends,” I answered. “But where is the commandant and
where are the others? The Vrouw Prinsloo here has been to see them, and
reports that they are all gone.”

“That is very likely,” said the Boer. “There is a rumour that some of
your Zulu brothers have come across the Tugela again to hunt us, which,
if you want to know the truth, is why we visited this place. Well, the
commandant has taken his men for a ride to see if he can meet them by
this bright moonlight. Pity he could not take you, too, since you would
have known so well where to find them, if they are there at all. Now
please talk no more nonsense to us, which it makes us sick to hear, and
don’t think that you can slip away because we are only two, for you
know our _roers_ are loaded with slugs, and we have orders to use
them.”

“There,” I said when I had shut the door, “now you have heard for
yourselves. As I thought, there is nothing in this fine story, so I
hope you are convinced.”

Neither the vrouw nor Marie made any answer, and Hans also held his
tongue. Yet, as I remembered afterwards, I saw a strange glance pass
between the two women, who were not at all convinced, and, although I
never dreamed of such a thing, had now determined to carry out their
own desperate plan. But of this I repeat the vrouw and Hans only knew
one half; the rest was locked in Marie’s loving heart.

“Perhaps you are right, Allan,” said the vrouw in the tone of one who
gives way to an unreasonable child. “I hope so, and, at any rate, you
can refuse to come out of the house to-morrow morning until you are
quite sure. And now let us eat some supper, for we shall not make
matters better by going hungry. Hans, bring the food.”

So we ate, or made pretence to eat, and I, being thirsty, drank two
cups of the black coffee dashed with spirit to serve as milk. After
this I grew strangely sleepy. The last thing I remember was Marie
looking at me with her beautiful eyes, that were full—ah! so full of
tender love, and kissing me again and again upon the lips.

I dreamed all sorts of dreams, rather pleasant dreams on the whole.
Then I woke up by degrees to find myself in an earthen pit shaped like
a bottle and having the remains of polished sides to it. It made me
think of Joseph who was let down by his brethren into a well in the
desert. Now, who on earth could have let me down into a well,
especially as I had no brethren? Perhaps I was not really in a well.
Perhaps this was a nightmare. Or I might be dead. I began to remember
that there were certain good reasons why I should be dead. Only,
only—why should they have buried me in woman’s clothes as I seemed to
wear?

And what was that noise that had wakened me?

It could not be the trump of doom, unless the trumping of doom went off
like a double-barrelled gun.

I began to try to climb out of my hole, but as it was nine feet deep
and bottle-shaped, which the light flowing in from the neck showed, I
found this impossible. Just as I was giving up the attempt, a yellow
face appeared in that neck, which looked to me like the face of Hans,
and an arm was projected downwards.

“Jump, if you are awake, baas,” said a voice—surely it was the voice of
Hans—“and I will pull you out.”

So I jumped, and caught the arm above the wrist. Then the owner of the
arm pulled desperately, and the end of it was that I succeeded in
gripping the edge of the bottle-like hole, and, with the help of the
arm, in dragging myself out.

“Now, baas,” said Hans, for it _was_ Hans, “run, run before the Boers
catch you.”

“What Boers?” I asked, sleepily; “and how can I run with these things
flapping about my legs?”

Then I looked about me, and, although the dawn was only just breaking,
began to recognise my surroundings. Surely this was the Prinsloos’
house to my right, and that, faintly seen through the mist about a
hundred paces away, was Marie’s and my own. There seemed to be
something going on yonder which excited my awakening curiosity. I could
see figures moving in an unusual manner, and desired to know what they
were doing. I began to walk towards them, and Hans, for his part, began
to try to drag me in an opposite direction, uttering all sorts of
gibberish as to the necessity of my running away. But I would not be
dragged; indeed, I struck at him, until at last, with an exclamation of
despair, he let go of me and vanished.

So I went on alone. I came to my house, or what I thought resembled it,
and there saw a figure lying on its face on the ground some ten or
fifteen yards to the right of the doorway, and noted abstractedly that
it was dressed in my clothes. The Vrouw Prinsloo, in her absurd night
garments, was waddling towards the figure, and a little way off stood
Hernan Pereira, apparently in the act of reloading a double-barrelled
gun. Beyond, staring at him, stood the lantern-faced Henri Marais,
pulling at his long beard with one hand and holding a rifle in the
other. Behind were two saddled horses in the charge of a raw Kaffir,
who looked on stupidly.

The Vrouw Prinsloo reached the body that lay upon the ground dressed in
what resembled my clothes, and bending down her stout shape with an
effort, turned it over. She glared into its face and then began to
shriek.

“Come here, Henri Marais,” she shrieked, “come, see what your beloved
nephew has done! You had a daughter who was all your life to you, Henri
Marais. Well, come, look at her after your beloved nephew has finished
his work with her!”

Henri Marais advanced slowly like one who does not understand. He stood
over the body on the ground, and looked down upon it through the
morning mists.

Then suddenly he went mad. His broad hat fell from his head, and his
long hair seemed to stand up. Also his beard grew big and bristled like
the feathers of a bird in frosty weather. He turned on Hernan Pereira.
“You devil!” he shouted, and his voice sounded like the roar of a wild
beast; “you devil, you have murdered my daughter! Because you could not
get Marie for yourself, you have murdered her. Well, I will pay you
back!”

Without more ado he lifted his gun and fired straight at Hernan
Pereira, who sank slowly to the ground and lay there groaning.

Just then I grew aware that horsemen were advancing upon us, a great
number of horsemen, though whence they came at that time I did not
know. One of these I recognised even in my half-drunken state, for he
had impressed himself very vividly upon my mind. He was the dark-browed
commandant who had tried and condemned me to death. He dismounted, and,
staring at the two figures that lay upon the ground, said in a loud and
terrible voice:

“What is this? Who are these men, and why are they shot? Explain, Henri
Marais.”

“Men!” wailed Henri Marais, “they are not men. One is a woman—my only
child; and the other is a devil, who, being a devil, will not die. See!
he will not die. Give me another gun that I may make him die.”

The commandant looked about him wildly, and his eye fell upon the Vrouw
Prinsloo.

“What has chanced, vrouw?” he asked.

“Only this,” she replied in a voice of unnatural calm. “Your murderers
whom you set on in the name of law and justice have made a mistake. You
told them to murder Allan Quatermain for reasons of your own. Well,
they have murdered his wife instead.”

Now the commandant struck his hand upon his forehead and groaned, and
I, half awakened at last, ran forward, shaking my fists and gibbering.

“Who is that?” asked the commandant. “Is it a man or a woman?”

“It is a man in woman’s clothing; it is Allan Quatermain,” answered the
vrouw, “whom we drugged and tried to hide from your butchers.”

“God above us!” exclaimed the commandant, “is this earth or hell?”

Then the wounded Pereira raised himself upon one hand.

“I am dying,” he cried; “my life is bleeding away, but before I die I
must speak. All that story I told against the Englishman is false. He
never plotted with Dingaan against the Boers. It was I who plotted with
Dingaan. Although I hated him because he found me out, I did not wish
Retief and our people to be killed. But I did wish Allan Quatermain to
be killed, because he had won her whom I loved, though, as it happened,
all the others were slain, and he alone escaped. Then I came here and
learned that Marie was his wife—yes, his wife indeed—and grew mad with
hate and jealousy. So I bore false witness against him, and, you fools,
you believed me and ordered me to shoot him who is innocent before God
and man. Then things went wrong. The woman tricked me again—for the
last time. She dressed herself as the man, and in the dawnlight I was
deceived. I killed her, her whom I love alone, and now her father, who
loved her also, has killed me.”

By this time I understood all, for my drugged brain had awakened at
last. I ran to the brute upon the ground; grotesque in my woman’s
garments all awry, I leaped on him and stamped out the last of his
life. Then, standing over his dead body, I shook my fists and cried:

“Men, see what you have done. May God pay you back all you owe her and
me!”

They dismounted, they came round me, they protested, they even wept.
And I, I raved at them upon the one side, while the mad Henri Marais
raved upon the other; and the Vrouw Prinsloo, waving her big arms,
called down the curse of God and the blood of the innocent upon their
heads and those of their children for ever.

Then I remember no more.

When I came to myself two weeks afterwards, for I had been very ill and
in delirium, I was lying in the house of the Vrouw Prinsloo alone. The
Boers had all gone, east and west and north and south, and the dead
were long buried. They had taken Henri Marais with them, so I was told,
dragging him away in a bullock cart, to which he was tied, for he was
raving mad. Afterwards he became quieter, and, indeed, lived for years,
walking about and asking all whom he met if they could lead him to
Marie. But enough of him—poor man, poor man!

The tale which got about was that Pereira had murdered Marie out of
jealousy, and been shot by her father. But there were so many tragic
histories in those days of war and massacre that this particular one
was soon quite forgotten, especially as those concerned in it for one
reason and another did not talk overmuch of its details. Nor did I talk
of it, since no vengeance could mend my broken heart.

They brought me a letter that had been found on Marie’s breast, stained
with her blood.

Here it is:

“MY HUSBAND,

“Thrice have you saved my life, and now it is my turn to save yours,
for there is no other path. It may be that they will kill you
afterwards, but if so, I shall be glad to have died first in order that
I may be ready to greet you in the land beyond.

“I drugged you, Allan, then I cut off my hair and dressed myself in
your clothes. The Vrouw Prinsloo, Hans and I set my garments upon you.
They led you out as though you were fainting, and the guards, seeing
me, whom they thought was you, standing in the doorway, let them pass
without question.

“What may happen I do not know, for I write this after you are gone. I
hope, however, that you will escape and lead some full and happy life,
though I fear that its best moments will always be shadowed by memories
of me. For I know you love me, Allan, and will always love me, as I
shall always love you.

“The light is burning out—like mine—so farewell, farewell, farewell!
All earthly stories come to an end at last, but at that end we shall
meet again. Till then, adieu. Would that I could have done more for
you, since to die for one who is loved with body, heart and soul is but
a little thing. Still I have been your wife, Allan, and your wife I
shall remain when the world is old. Heaven does not grow old, Allan,
and there I shall greet you.

“The light is dead, but—oh!—in my heart another light arises!

“Your MARIE.”

This was her letter.

I do not think there is anything more to be said.

Such is the history of my first love. Those who read it, if any ever
do, will understand why I have never spoken of her before, and do not
wish it to be known until I, too, am dead and have gone to join the
great soul of Marie Marais.

ALLAN QUATERMAIN.