Part 81 (1/2)
”Well, now--if I might be so bold as to advise--you be a bit careful. A lot more of them Kafirs have broken out, and there are gangs of 'em out all over this side of the Buffalo range, and that's where you'll have to cut through to reach the main camp--unless you go all the way round by 'King,' which'll take you a day longer.”
”Well, I shan't do that, anyhow. Thanks for the hint, all the same.
Here, Sam.”
”Inkos?”
”Don't forget what I told you, and--here--give this to Miss Lilian.”
”This” was a note, and the speaker's tone trembled ever so slightly over the name.
”Yeh bo, Inkos,” replied Sam, earnestly. Then a sudden impulse seized him, and, bending down, he kissed his master's foot as it rested in the stirrup. A vague superst.i.tious thrill shot through Claverton's heart.
These natives were sometimes gifted with marvellous presage. Did this touching act of homage on the part of his humble follower portend that they would never see each other again. Claverton put out his hand.
”Good-bye, Sam. Mind what I told you.”
The native took it shyly. Then he turned away, his eyes sparkling as he held up his head proudly. His master had shaken hands with him--a black man. Death itself would be nothing to what he would willingly undergo for that master. Meanwhile the white spectators smiled indulgently among themselves. They did not sneer; a little of Claverton's reputation had been noised abroad, and they respected him too much. But some of these Englishmen were such queer fellows. Shaking hands with a n.i.g.g.e.r, for instance--etcetera, etcetera!
The temporary diversion afforded by these preparations and precautions over, Claverton's thoughts again ran in the old channel. He gazed on the mountain range in front of him, peak after peak rising up to the eternal blue, and remembered how they two had looked on them together from that very spot when all seemed so secure and propitious not much more than a couple of months before; and it was like the mocking smile of a demon, this same landscape smiling on him now in the bright fresh morning. Something or other made his mind recur to poor Herbert Spalding plunging overboard in the dead of night deliberately intending to take his own life, and the thought stung him like a spur. _He_ would take not his own life, but that of the man who had taken what was far dearer to him than his own life. Every stride of his horse was bringing him nearer and nearer to his sure vengeance.
The sound of hoofs behind interrupted his meditations, and the Boer, whom true to his word he had not waited for a minute beyond the stipulated time, overtook him, riding at a gallop. He frowned. In no mood for conversation, he would be obliged to listen to and answer the commonplaces of this lout, and there was no getting rid of him. But the Dutchman was of the taciturn order. In half an hour his topics of conversation were used up, and he was content to jog along in silence by the side of his companion, who certainly gave him no encouragement to break it. Thus the day wore on, and by the middle of the afternoon they were in among the mountains. Hitherto there had been little sign of disturbance. They had pa.s.sed a few farmsteads and a native kraal or two--the latter still inhabited by so-called ”loyals,” in other words, natives who did not fight against the Goverment themselves, but a.s.sisted with supplies and information those who did. But even these habitations had ceased now, and they wound their way through the great gloomy gorges covered with dense bush, where the sentinel baboons eat and looked down upon them from many an overhanging cliff, which echoed their loud resounding bark.
Suddenly their steeds p.r.i.c.ked up their ears, with an inquiring snort.
Promptly Claverton's revolver was in his hand, while his companion held his rifle--an excellent Martini-Henry--ready on his hip. Something was heard approaching.
”Kafirs!” exclaimed the Dutchman, excitedly.
”Ts.h.!.+ No; it's a horseman.”
It was--and a strange figure he cut as at that moment he appeared round a bend in the track. A middle-sized, plebeian-looking man, mounted on a sorry nag. His hair, and the wispy sc.r.a.ps of beard stuck about his parchment-coloured visage, were of a neutral tint; and a snub nose, and projecting lower jaw, in no wise prepossessed one towards the individual. He was arrayed in a rusty suit of black, and a dirty white tie was stuck half in half out of the throat of his clerical waistcoat, and he sat his horse ”like a tailor;” but the most grotesque article of this out-of-keeping costume was his hat--a reduced ”chimney-pot,” with a huge puggaree wound turban-wise about the crown, the ends falling down over the wearer's back.
”Bah!” exclaimed Claverton. ”Why, it's a parson. What the deuce can he be doing here?”
The stranger's countenance lighted up with satisfaction at sight of the pair.
”This is a relief,” he said. ”I thought I should never get out of this dreadful bush alive.”
”Where were you going to?” asked Claverton. ”I was going to take a short cut through to Cathcart. They told me the way was safe, and now I find it isn't. The whole bush is full of Kafirs. I could hear them calling to each other in every direction.”
”Quite sure it wasn't baboons?”
”Oh, yes; I saw them--hundreds of them. Luckily they didn't see me. It was in trying to avoid them that I lost myself.”
”Where did you say they were?” went on Claverton. He had formed no very high opinion of his new acquaintance, who informed him that his name was Swaysland, and that he was a missionary.
”Over in that next kloof. But you are not going on, surely? The way is not safe, indeed it is not.”
”We are, though--straight. But I--”
The words were cut short, for the young horse, all unbroken as it was, gave a violent shy, which, taking its rider unawares, nearly unseated him, so unexpected was it. And, simultaneously, several red forms rose up amid the bushes three hundred yards in their rear and poured in a rattling volley, but, as usual, firing well over the heads of their destined victims.
”By Jove! there they are,” cried Claverton. ”Come along; there's no turning back now. We must ride like the devil,” and he spurred along the path followed closely by the other two. At least two hundred Kafirs sprang up and started in pursuit, discharging their pieces as they leaped from cover with a fierce shout, and the bullets whistled around the fugitives with a sharp, shrill hiss.
”Come on, Mr Swaysland. Spur up that nag of yours; we shall get a good start here,” cried Claverton, as they reached a comparatively open plateau of about a mile in extent. But it was uphill ground and rough withal, and the pursuers were only too evidently gaining on them.