HOW THE SISTERS CAME TO MOOIFONTEIN
“Captain Niel,” said Bessie
Croft for she was named Bessie when
they had painfully limped one hundred yards or so,
“will you think me rude if I ask you a question?”
“Not at all.”
“What has induced you to come and bury yourself
in this place?”
“Why do you ask?”
“Because I don’t think
that you will like it. I don’t think,”
she added slowly, “that it is a fit place for
an English gentleman and an army officer like you.
You will find the Boer ways horrid, and then there
will only be my old uncle and us two for you to associate
with.”
John Niel laughed. “English
gentlemen are not so particular nowadays, I can assure
you, Miss Croft, especially when they have to earn
a living. Take my case, for instance, for I may
as well tell you exactly how I stand. I have
been in the army fourteen years, and I am now thirty-four.
Well, I have been able to live there because I had
an old aunt who allowed me 120 pounds a year.
Six months ago she died, leaving me the little property
she possessed, for most of her income came from an
annuity. After paying expenses, duty, &c., it
amounts to 1,115 pounds. Now, the interest on
this is about fifty pounds a year, and I can’t
live in the army on that. Just after my aunt’s
death I came to Durban with my regiment from Mauritius,
and now they are ordered home. Well, I liked
the country, and I knew that I could not afford to
live in England, so I got a year’s leave of
absence, and made up my mind to have a look round
to see if I could not take to farming. Then a
gentleman in Durban told me of your uncle, and said
that he wanted to dispose of a third interest in his
place for a thousand pounds, as he was getting too
old to manage it himself. So I entered into correspondence
with him, and agreed to come up for a few months to
see how I liked it; and accordingly here I am, just
in time to save you from being knocked to bits by an
ostrich.”
“Yes, indeed,” she answered,
laughing; “you’ve had a warm welcome at
any rate. Well, I hope you will like it.”
Just as he finished his story they
reached the top of the rise over which the ostrich
had pursued Bessie Croft, and saw a Kafir coming towards
them, leading the pony with one hand and Captain Niel’s
horse with the other. About twenty yards behind
the horses a lady was walking.
“Ah,” said Bessie, “they’ve
caught the horses, and here is Jess come to see what
is the matter.”
By this time the lady in question
was quite close, so that John was able to gather a
first impression of her. She was small and rather
thin, with quantities of curling brown hair; not by
any means a lovely woman, as her sister undoubtedly
was, but possessing two very remarkable characteristics a
complexion of extraordinary and uniform pallor, and
a pair of the most beautiful dark eyes he had ever
looked on. Altogether, though her size was almost
insignificant, she was a striking-looking person,
with a face few men would easily forget. Before
he had time to observe any more the two parties had
met.
“What on earth is the matter,
Bessie?” Jess said, with a quick glance at her
sister’s companion, and speaking in a low full
voice, with just a slight South African accent, that
is taking enough in a pretty woman. Thereon Bessie
broke out with a history of their adventure, appealing
to Captain Niel for confirmation at intervals.
Meanwhile Jess Croft stood quite still
and silent, and it struck John that her face was the
most singularly impassive one he had ever seen.
It never changed, even when her sister told her how
the ostrich rolled on her and nearly killed her, or
how they finally subdued the foe. “Dear
me,” he thought to herself, “what a very
strange woman! She can’t have much heart.”
But just as he thought it the girl looked up, and then
he saw where the expression lay. It was in those
remarkable eyes. Immovable as was her face, the
dark eyes were alight with life and a suppressed excitement
that made them shine gloriously. The contrast
between the shining eyes and the impassive face beneath
them struck him as so extraordinary as to be almost
uncanny. As a matter of fact, it was doubtless
both unusual and remarkable.
“You have had a wonderful escape,
but I am sorry for the bird,” she said at last.
“Why?” asked John.
“Because we were great friends.
I was the only person who could manage him.”
“Yes,” put in Bessie,
“the savage brute would follow her about like
a dog. It was just the oddest thing I ever saw.
But come on; we must be getting home, it’s growing
dark. Mouti” which, being interpreted,
means Medicine she added, addressing the
Kafir in Zulu “help Captain Niel
on to his horse. Be careful that the saddle does
not twist round; the girths may be loose.”
Thus adjured, John, with the help
of the Zulu, clambered into his saddle, an example
that the lady quickly followed, and they set off once
more through the gathering darkness. Presently
he became aware that they were passing up a drive
bordered by tall blue gums, and next minute the barking
of a large dog, which he afterwards knew by the name
of Stomp, and the sudden appearance of lighted windows
told him that they had reached the house. At
the door or rather, opposite to it, for
there was a verandah in front they halted
and got off their horses. As they dismounted
there came a shout of welcome from the house, and presently
in the doorway, showing out clearly against the light,
appeared a striking and, in its way, a most pleasant
figure. He for it was a man was
very tall, or, rather, he had been very tall.
Now he was much bent with age and rheumatism.
His long white hair hung low upon his neck, and fell
back from a prominent brow. The top of the head
was quite bald, like the tonsure of a priest, and
shone and glistened in the lamplight, and round this
oasis the thin white locks fell down. The face
was shrivelled like the surface of a well-kept apple,
and, like an apple, rosy red. The features were
aquiline and strongly marked; the eyebrows still black
and very bushy, and beneath them shone a pair of grey
eyes, keen and bright as those of a hawk. But
for all its sharpness, there was nothing unpleasant
or fierce about the face; on the contrary, it was
pervaded by a remarkable air of good-nature and pleasant
shrewdness. For the rest, the man was dressed
in rough tweed clothes, tall riding-boots, and held
a broad-brimmed Boer hunting hat in his hand.
Such, as John Niel first saw him, was the outer person
of old Silas Croft, one of the most remarkable men
in the Transvaal.
“Is that you, Captain Niel?”
roared out the stentorian voice. “The natives
said you were coming. A welcome to you! I
am glad to see you very glad. Why,
what is the matter with you?” he went on as the
Zulu Mouti ran to help him off his horse.
“Matter, Mr. Croft?” answered
John; “why, the matter is that your favourite
ostrich has nearly killed me and your niece here, and
that I have killed your favourite ostrich.”
Then followed explanations from Bessie,
during which he was helped off his horse and into
the house.
“It serves me right,”
said the old man. “To think of it now, just
to think of it! Well, Bessie, my love, thank
God that you escaped ay, and you too, Captain
Niel. Here, you boys, take the Scotch cart and
a couple of oxen and go and fetch the brute home.
We may as well have the feathers off him, at any rate,
before the aasvogels (vultures) tear him to
bits.”
After he had washed himself and tended
his injuries with arnica and water, John managed to
limp into the principal sitting-room, where supper
was waiting. It was a very pleasant room, furnished
in European style, and carpeted with mats made of
springbuck skins. In the corner stood a piano,
and by it a bookcase, filled with the works of standard
authors, the property, as John rightly guessed, of
Bessie’s sister Jess.
Supper went off pleasantly enough,
and after it was over the two girls sang and played
whilst the men smoked. And here a fresh surprise
awaited him, for after Bessie, who apparently had
now almost recovered from her mauling, had played
a piece or two creditably enough, Jess, who so far
had been nearly silent, sat down at the piano.
She did not do this willingly, indeed, for it was
not until her patriarchal uncle had insisted in his
ringing, cheery voice that she should let Captain Niel
hear how she could sing that she consented. But
at last she did consent, and then, after letting her
fingers stray somewhat aimlessly along the chords,
she suddenly broke out into such song as John Niel
had never heard before. Her voice, beautiful
as it was, was not what is known as a cultivated voice,
and it was a German song, therefore he did not understand
it, but there was no need of words to translate its
burden. Passion, despairing yet hoping through
despair, echoed in its every line, and love, unending
love, hovered over the glorious notes nay,
possessed them like a spirit, and made them his.
Up! up! rang her wild sweet voice, thrilling his nerves
till they answered to the music as an Aeolian harp
answers to the winds. On went the song with a
divine sweep, like the sweep of rushing pinions; higher,
yet higher it soared, lifting up the listener’s
heart far above the world on the trembling wings of
sound ay, even higher, till the music hung
at heaven’s gate, and falling thence, swiftly
as an eagle falls, quivered, and was dead.
John sighed, and so strongly was he
moved, sank back in his chair, feeling almost faint
with the revulsion of feeling that ensued when the
notes had died away. He looked up, and saw Bessie
watching him with an air of curiosity and amusement.
Jess was still leaning against the piano, and gently
touching the notes, over which her head was bent low,
showing the coils of curling hair that were twisted
round it like a coronet.
“Well, Captain Niel,”
said the old man, waving his pipe in her direction,
“and what do you say to my singing-bird’s
music, eh? Isn’t it enough to draw the
heart out of a man, eh, and turn his marrow to water,
eh?”
“I never heard anything quite
like it,” he answered simply, “and I have
heard most singers. It is beautiful. Certainly,
I never expected to hear such singing in the Transvaal.”
Jess turned quickly, and he observed
that, though her eyes were alight with excitement,
her face was as impassive as ever.
“There is no need for you to
laugh at me, Captain Niel,” she said quickly,
and then, with an abrupt “Good-night,”
she left the room.
The old man smiled, jerked the stem
of his pipe over his shoulder after her, and winked
in a way that, no doubt, meant unutterable things,
but which did not convey much to his astonished guest,
who sat still and said nothing. Then Bessie rose
and bade him good-night in her pleasant voice, and
with housewifely care inquired as to whether his room
was to his taste, and how many blankets he liked upon
his bed, telling him that if he found the odour of
the moonflowers which grew near the verandah too strong,
he had better shut the right-hand window and open that
on the other side of the room. Then at length,
with a piquant little nod of her golden head, she
went off, looking, John thought as he watched her
retreating figure, about as healthy, graceful, and
generally satisfactory a young woman as a man could
wish to see.
“Take a glass of grog, Captain
Niel,” said the old man, pushing the square
bottle towards him, “you’ll need it after
the mauling that brute gave you. By the way,
I haven’t thanked you for saving my Bessie!
But I do thank you, yes, that I do. I must tell
you that Bessie is my favourite niece. Never
was there such a girl never. Moves
like a springbuck, and what an eye and form!
Work too she’ll do as much work as
three. There’s no nonsense about Bessie,
none at all. She’s not a fine lady, for
all her fine looks.”
“The two sisters seem very different,”
said John.
“Ay, you’re right there,”
answered the old man. “You’d never
think that the same blood ran in their veins, would
you? There’s three years between them,
that’s one thing. Bessie’s the youngest,
you see she’s just twenty, and Jess
is twenty-three. Lord, to think that it is twenty-three
years since that girl was born! And theirs is
a queer story too.”
“Indeed?” said his listener interrogatively.
“Ay,” Silas went on absently,
knocking out his pipe, and refilling it from a big
brown jar of coarse-cut Boer tobacco, “I’ll
tell it to you if you like: you are going to
live in the house, and you may as well know it.
I am sure, Captain Niel, that it will go no further.
You see I was born in England, yes, and well-born
too. I come from Cambridgeshire from
the fat fen-land down round Ely. My father was
a clergyman. Well, he wasn’t rich, and
when I was twenty he gave me his blessing, thirty
sovereigns in my pocket, and my passage to the Cape;
and I shook his hand, God bless him, and off I came,
and here in the old colony and this country I have
been for fifty years, for I was seventy yesterday.
Well, I’ll tell you more about that another time,
it’s of the girls I’m speaking now.
After I left home some years after my
dear old father married again, a youngish woman with
some money, but rather beneath him in life, and by
her he had one son, and then died. Well, it was
but little I heard of my half-brother, except that
he had turned out very badly, married, and taken to
drink, till one night some twelve years ago, when
a strange thing happened. I was sitting here in
this very room, ay, in this very chair for
this part of the house was up then, though the wings
weren’t built smoking my pipe, and
listening to the lashing of the rain, for it was a
very foul night, when suddenly an old pointer dog
I had, named Ben, began to bark.
“‘Lie down, Ben, it’s only the Kafirs,’
said I.
“Just then I thought I heard
a faint sort of rapping at the door, and Ben barked
again, so I got up and opened it, and in came two little
girls wrapped in old shawls or some such gear.
Well, I shut the door, looking first to see if there
were any more outside, and then I turned and stared
at the two little things with my mouth open. There
they stood, hand in hand, the water dripping from
both of them; the elder might have been eleven, and
the second about eight years old. They didn’t
say anything, but the elder turned and took the shawl
and hat off the younger that was Bessie and
there was her sweet little face and her golden hair,
and damp enough both of them were, and she put her
thumb in her mouth, and stood and looked at me till
I began to think that I was dreaming.
“‘Please, sir,’
said the taller at last, ’is this Mr. Croft’s
house Mr. Croft South African
Republic?’
“’Yes, little Miss, this
is his house, and this is the South African Republic,
and I am he. And now who might you be, my dears?’
I answered.
“’If you please, sir,
we are your nieces, and we have come to you from England.’
“‘What!’ I holloaed,
startled out of my wits, as well I might be.
“‘Oh, sir,’ says
the poor little thing, clasping her thin wet hands,
’please don’t send us away. Bessie
is so wet, and cold and hungry too, she isn’t
fit to go any farther.’
“And she set to work to cry,
whereon the little one cried also, from fright and
cold and sympathy.
“Well, of course, I took them
both to the fire, and set them on my knees, and called
for Hebe, the old Hottentot woman who did my cooking,
and between us we undressed them, and wrapped them
up in some old clothes, and fed them with soup and
wine, so that in half an hour they were quite happy
and not a bit frightened.
“‘And now, young ladies,’
I said, ’come and give me a kiss, both of you,
and tell me how you came here.’
“This is the tale they told
me completed, of course, from what I learnt
afterwards and an odd one it is. It
seems that my half-brother married a Norfolk lady a
sweet young thing and treated her like a
dog. He was a drunken rascal, was my half-brother,
and he beat his poor wife and shamefully neglected
her, and even ill-used the two little girls, till
at last the poor woman, weak as she was from suffering
and ill health, could bear it no longer, and formed
the wild idea of escaping to this country and of throwing
herself upon my protection. That shows how desperate
she must have been. She scraped together and borrowed
some money, enough to pay for three second-class passages
to Natal and a few pounds over, and one day, when
her brute of a husband was away on the drink and gamble,
she slipped on board a sailing ship in the London
Docks, and before he knew anything about it they were
well out to sea. But it was her last effort,
poor dear soul, and the excitement of it finished
her. Before they had been ten days at sea, she
sank and died, and the two little children were left
alone. What they must have suffered, or rather
what poor Jess must have suffered, for she was old
enough to feel, God only knows, but I can tell you
this, she has never got over the shock to this hour.
It has left its mark on her, sir. Still, let
people say what they will, there is a Power who looks
after the helpless, and that Power took those poor,
homeless, wandering children under its wing.
The captain of the vessel befriended them, and when
at last they reached Durban some of the passengers
made a subscription, and paid an old Boer, who was
coming up this way with his wife to the Transvaal,
to take them under his charge. The Boer and his
vrouw treated the children fairly well, but
they did not do one thing more than they bargained
for. At the turn from the Wakkerstroom road,
that you came along to-day, they put the girls down,
for they had no luggage with them, and told them that
if they went along there they would come to Meinheer
Croft’s house. That was in the middle of
the afternoon, and they were till eight o’clock
getting here, poor little dears, for the track was
fainter then than it is now, and they wandered off
into the veldt, and would have perished there in the
wet and cold had they not chanced to see the lights
of the house. That was how my nieces came here,
Captain Niel, and here they have been ever since,
except for a couple of years when I sent them to the
Cape for schooling, and a lonely man I was when they
were away.”
“And how about the father?”
asked John Niel, deeply interested. “Did
you ever hear any more of him?”
“Hear of him, the villain!”
almost shouted the old man, jumping up in wrath.
“Ay, d n him, I heard of him.
What do you think? The two chicks had been with
me some eighteen months, long enough for me to learn
to love them with all my heart, when one fine morning,
as I was seeing about the new kraal wall, I saw
a fellow come riding up on an old raw-boned grey horse.
Up he comes to me, and as he came I looked at him,
and said to myself, ’You are a drunkard you are,
and a rogue, it’s written on your face, and,
what’s more, I know your face.’ You
see I did not guess that it was a son of my own father
that I was looking at. How should I?
“‘Is your name Croft?’ he said.
“‘Ay,’ I answered.
“‘So is mine,’ he
went on with a sort of drunken leer. ’I’m
your brother.’
“‘Are you?’ I said,
beginning to get my back up, for I guessed what his
game was, ’and what may you be after? I
tell you at once, and to your face, that if you are
my brother you are a blackguard, and I don’t
want to know you or have anything to do with you;
and if you are not, I beg your pardon for coupling
you with such a scoundrel.’
“‘Oh, that’s your
tune, is it?’ he said with a sneer. ’Well,
now, my dear brother Silas, I want my children.
They have got a little half-brother at home for
I have married again, Silas who is anxious
to have them to play with, so if you will be so good
as to hand them over, I’ll take them away at
once.’
“‘You’ll take them
away, will you?’ said I, all of a tremble with
rage and fear.
“’Yes, Silas, I will.
They are mine by law, and I am not going to breed
children for you to have the comfort of their society.
I’ve taken advice, Silas, and that’s sound
law,’ and he leered at me again.
“I stood and looked at that
man, and thought of how he had treated those poor
children and their young mother, and my blood boiled,
and I grew mad. Without another word I jumped
over the half-finished wall, and caught him by the
leg (for I was a strong man ten years ago) and jerked
him off the horse. As he came down he dropped
the sjambock from his hand, and I laid hold
of it and then and there gave him the soundest hiding
a man ever had. Lord, how he did holloa!
When I was tired I let him get up.
“‘Now,’ I said,
’be off with you, and if you come back here I’ll
bid the Kafirs hunt you to Natal with their sticks.
This is the South African Republic, and we don’t
care overmuch about law here.’ Which we
didn’t in those days.
“‘All right, Silas,’
he said, ’all right, you shall pay for this.
I’ll have those children, and, for your sake,
I’ll make their lives a hell you
mark my words South African Republic or
no South African Republic. I’ve got the
law on my side.’
“Off he rode, cursing and swearing,
and I flung his sjambock after him. This
was the first and last time that I saw my brother.”
“What became of him?” asked John Niel.
“I’ll tell you, just to
show you again that there is a Power which keeps such
men in its eye. He rode back to Newcastle that
night, and went about the canteen there abusing me,
and getting drunker and drunker, till at last the
canteen keeper sent for his boys to turn him out.
Well, the boys were rough, as Kafirs are apt to be
with a drunken white man, and he struggled and fought,
and in the middle of it the blood began to run from
his mouth, and he dropped down dead of a broken blood-vessel,
and there was an end of him. That is the story
of the two girls, Captain Niel, and now I am off to
bed. To-morrow I’ll show you round the farm,
and we will have a talk about business. Good-night
to you, Captain Niel. Good-night!”