THE TABLES TURNED.
Eager at the prospect of a brush,
their appetites for which had been whetted by what
had just occurred, they resumed their way in the best
of spirits, and at length fixing upon a suitable spot
the party off-saddled for breakfast.
“We ought to fall in with a
patrol of Brathwaite’s Horse lower down,”
remarked a man, stirring the contents of a three-legged
cooking-pot with a wooden spoon. “Then
we should be strong enough to take the bush for it
and pepper Jack Kafir handsomely.”
“If we can find him,”
rejoined another with a loud guffaw. “Hallo!
Who’s this?”
A dark form appeared in the hollow
beneath. Immediately every man had seized his
rifle, and the moment was a perilous one for the new
arrival.
“Hold hard! Don’t
fire!” cried Shelton. “It’s
only a single Kafir. Let’s see what the
fellow wants.” And lowering their weapons
they awaited the approach of a rather sulky looking
native, who drew near with a suspicious and apprehensive
expression of countenance.
“Who are you and where do you come from?”
asked Shelton.
“From down there, Baas,”
replied the fellow, in fair English, jerking his thumb
in the direction of a labyrinth of bushy kloofs stretching
away beneath. “They have taken all my cattle the
Gcalekas have. I can show you where to find
theirs.”
The men looked at each other and several
shook their heads incredulously.
“What are you? Are you a Gcaleka?”
asked Shelton.
“No, Baas. Bomvana. I’m
Jonas. I’m a loyal Mission-station boy.”
“Oh, the devil you are! Now, then, Jonas,
what about these cattle?”
Then the native unfolded his tale how
that in the forest land immediately beneath them was
concealed a large number of the Gcaleka cattle a
thousand of them at least. There were some men
in charge, about sixty, he said, but still the whites
might be strong enough to take the lot; only they
would have to fight, perhaps.
Carefully they questioned him, but
from the main details of his story he never swerved.
His object, he said, was to be revenged on the Gcalekas,
who had billeted themselves in the Bomvana country
and were carrying things with a high hand. But
Shelton was not quite satisfied.
“Look here, Jonas,” he
said impressively. “Supposing I were to
tell you that this yarn of yours is all a cock-and-bull
lie, and that you’ve come here to lead us into
a trap? And supposing I were to tell half a dozen
men here to shoot you when I count twenty? What
then?”
All eyes were fixed upon the native’s
face, as the leader left off speaking. But not
a muscle therein quailed. For a minute he did
not reply. Then he shook his head, with a wholly
incredulous laugh.
“Nay, Baas,” he said. “Baas
is joking.”
“Well, you must be telling the
truth or else you must be the pluckiest nigger in
all Kafirland to come here and play the fool with us,”
said Shelton. “What do you say, boys?
Shall we trust to what this fellow tells us and make
a dash for the spoil?”
An acclamation of universal assent
hailed this proposal. In an incredibly short
space of time the horses were saddled, and with the
native in their midst the whole party moved down in
the direction of the bush.
“In here, Baas,”
said the guide, piloting them down a narrow path where
they were obliged to maintain single file. On
either side was a dark, dense jungle, the plumed euphorbia
rising high overhead above the bush. The path,
rough and widening, seemed to lead down and down no
one knew whither. The guide was not suffered
to lead the way, but was kept near the head of the
party, those immediately around him being prepared
to shoot him dead at the first sign of treachery.
“Damned fools we must be to
come into a place like this on the bare word of a
black fellow,” grunted Carhayes. “I
think the cuss means square and above board but
going down here in this picnicking way it
doesn’t seem right somehow.”
But they were in for it now, and soon
the path opened, and before and beneath them lay a
network of kloofs covered with a thick, jungly scrub,
here and there a rugged krantz shooting up from
the waves of foliage. Not a sound was heard as
they filed on in the cloudless stillness of the sunny
forenoon. Even the birds were silent in that
great lonely valley.
“There,” whispered the
Bomvana, when they had gone some distance further.
“There is the cattle.”
He pointed to a long, winding kloof
whose entrance was commanded by cliffs on either side.
Looking cautiously around, they entered this.
Soon they could hear the sound of voices.
“By George! We are on
them now,” said Shelton in a low tone.
“But, keep cool, men only keep cool!”
They passed a large kraal
which was quite deserted, but only just, for the smoke
still rose from more than one fire, and a couple of
dogs were yet skulking around the huts. Eagerly
and in silence they pressed forward, and lo turning
an angle of the cliff there burst upon their
view a sight which amply repaid the risk of the enterprise
they had embarked upon. For the narrow defile
was full of cattle an immense herd which
were being driven forward as rapidly and as quietly
as the two score armed savages in their rear could
drive them. Clearly the latter had got wind
of their approach.
“Allamaghtaag!”
exclaimed one of the men, catching sight of the mass
of animals, which, plunging and crowding over each
other, threaded their way through the bush in a dozen
separate, but closely packed, columns. “What
a take! A thousand at least!”
“Ping ping!
Whigge!” The bullets began to sing about their
ears, and from the bush around there issued puffs
of smoke. The Kafirs who were driving the cattle,
seeing that the invaders were so few, dropped down
into cover and opened a brisk fire, but too late.
Quickly the foremost half of the patrol, reining
in, had poured a couple of effective volleys into
them, and at least a dozen of their number lay stretched
upon the ground, stone dead or writhing in the throes
of death; while several more might be seen limping
off as well as they could, their only thought now
being to save their own lives. The rest melted
away into the bush, whence they kept up a tolerably
brisk fire, and the bullets and bits of pot-leg began
to whistle uncomfortably close.
“Now, boys!” cried Shelton.
“Half of you come with me and Carhayes,
you take the other half and collect the cattle, but
don’t separate more than to that extent.”
And in furtherance of this injunction the now divided
force rode off as hard as it could go, to head the
animals back stumbling among stones, crashing
through bushes or flying over the same on
they dashed, helter-skelter, hardly knowing at times
how they kept their saddles.
Amid much shouting and whistling the
terrified creatures were at last turned. Down
the defile they rushed eyes rolling and
horns clashing, trampling to pulp the dead or helpless
bodies of some of their former drivers, who had been
shot in the earlier stages of the conflict. It
was an indescribable scene the dappled,
many-coloured hides flashing in the sun as the immense
herd surged furiously down that wild pass. And
mingling with the shouting and confusion, and the terrified
lowing of the cattle half-frenzied with the sight
and smell of blood the overhanging cliffs
echoed back in sharper tones the “crack-crack”
of the rifles of the Kaffirs, who, well under cover
themselves, kept up a continuous, but luckily ineffective,
fire upon the patrol.
Suddenly a dark form rose up in front
of the horsemen. Springing like a cat the savage
made a swift stab at the breast of his intended victim,
who swerved quickly, but not quickly enough, and the
blade of the assegai descended, inflicting an ugly
wound in the man’s side. Dropping to the
ground again, the daring assailant ducked in time to
avoid the revolver bullet aimed at him, and gliding
in among the fleeing cattle, escaped before the infuriated
frontiersman could get in another shot. So quickly
did it all take place that, except the wounded man
himself, hardly anybody knew what had happened.
“Hurt, Thompson?” sung
out Hoste, seeing that the man looked rather pale.
“No. Nothin’ to
speak of, at least. Time enough to see to it
by and by.”
As he spoke the horse of another man
plunged and then fell heavily forward. The poor
beast had been mortally stricken by one of the enemy’s
missiles, and would never rise again. The dismounted
man ran alongside of a comrade, holding on by the
stirrup of the latter.
“Why, what’s become of
the Bomvana?” suddenly inquired someone.
They looked around. There was
no sign of their guide. Could he have been playing
them false and slipped away in the confusion?
Even now the enemy might be lying in wait somewhere
in overwhelming force, ready to cut off their retreat.
“By Jove! There he is!”
cried another man presently. “And the
beggar’s dead!”
He was. In the confusion of
the attack they had forgotten their guide, who must
have fallen into the hands of the enemy, and have been
sacrificed to the vengeance of the latter. The
body of the unfortunate Bomvana, propped up in a sitting
posture against a tree by his slayers in savage mockery,
presented a hideous sight. The throat was cut
from ear to ear, and the trunk was nearly divided
by a terrible gash right across it just below the
ribs, while from several assegai stabs the dark arterial
blood was still oozing forth.
“Faugh!” exclaimed Hoste
with a grimace of disgust, while two or three of the
younger men of the party turned rather pale as they
shudderingly gazed upon the sickening sight.
“Poor devil! They’ve made short
work of him, anyhow.”
“H’m! I don’t
wonder at it,” said Shelton. “It
must be deuced rough to be sold by one of your own
men. Still, if that chap’s story was true
he was the aggrieved party. However, let’s
get on. We’ve got our work all before
us still.”
They had. It was no easy matter
to drive such an enormous herd through the thick bush.
Many of the animals were very wild, besides being
thoroughly scared with all the hustling to and fro
they had had and began to branch off from
the main body, drawing a goodly number after them.
These had to be out-manoeuvred, yet it would never
do for the men to straggle, for the Kafirs would hardly
let such a prize go without straining every effort
to retain it. Certain it was that the savages
were following them in the thick bush as near as they
dared, keenly watching an opportunity to retrieve or
partially retrieve the disaster of the
day.
Cautiously, then, the party retreated
with their spoil, seeking a favourable outlet by which
they could drive their unwieldy capture into the open
country; for on all sides the way out of the valley
was steep, broken, and bushy. Suddenly a shout
of warning and of consternation went up from a man
on the left of the advance. All eyes were turned
on him and from him upon the point to which
he signalled.
What they saw there was enough to
send the blood back to every heart.