HANS COETZEE COMES TO PRETORIA
Once he had turned the corner, John’s
recovery was rapid. Naturally of a vigorous constitution,
when the artery had reunited, he soon made up for
the great loss of blood which he had undergone, and
in a little more than a month from the date of his
wound physically, was almost as good a man as ever.
One morning it was the
20th of March Jess and he were sitting in
“The Palatial” garden. John was lying
in a lone cane deck chair that Jess had borrowed or
stolen out of one of the deserted houses, and smoking
a pipe. By his side, in a hole in the flat arm
of the chair, fashioned originally to receive a soda-water
tumbler, was a great bunch of purple grapes which
she had gathered for him; and on his knees lay a copy
of that journalistic curiosity, the “News of
the Camp,” which was chiefly remarkable for
its utter dearth of news. It was not easy to run
a journal in a beleaguered town.
They sat in silence: John puffing
away at his pipe, and Jess, her work one
of his socks lying idly upon her knees,
her hands clasped over it, and her eyes fixed upon
the lights and shadows that played with broad fingers
upon the wooded slopes beyond.
So silently did they sit that a great
green lizard came and basked himself in the sun within
a yard of them, and a beautiful striped butterfly
perched deliberately upon the purple grapes! It
was a delightful day and a delightful spot. They
were too far from the camp to be disturbed by its
rude noise, and the only sounds that reached their
ears were the rippling of running water and the whispers
of the wind, odorous with the breath of mimosa blooms,
as it stirred the stiff grey leaves on the blue gums.
They were seated in the shade of the
little house that Jess had learned to love as she
had never loved a spot before, but around them lay
the flood of sunshine shimmering like golden water;
and beyond the red line of the fence at the end of
the garden, where the rich pomegranate bloom tried
to blush the roses down, the hot air danced merrily
above the rough stone wall like a million microscopic
elves at play. Peace! everywhere was peace! and
in it the full heart of Nature beat out in radiant
life. Peace in the voice of the turtle-doves among
the willows! peace in the play of the sunshine and
the murmur of the wind! peace in the growing flowers
and hovering butterfly! Jess looked out at the
wealth and glory which were spread before her, and
thought that it was like heaven; then, giving way
to the melancholy strain in her nature, she began
to wonder idly how many human beings had sat and thought
the same things, and had been gathered up into the
azure of the past and forgotten; and how many would
sit and think there when she in her turn had been
utterly swept away into that gulf whence no echo ever
comes! But what did it matter? The sunshine
would still flood the earth with gold, the water would
ripple, and the butterflies hover; and there would
be other women to sit and fold their hands and consider
them, thinking the same identical thoughts, beyond
which our human intelligence cannot travel. And
so on for thousands upon thousands of centuries, till
at last the old world reaches its journey’s
appointed end, and, passing from the starry spaces,
is swallowed up with those it bore.
And she where would she
be? Would she still live on, and love and suffer
elsewhere, or was it all a cruel myth? Was she
merely a creature bred of the teeming earth, or had
she an individuality beyond the earth? What awaited
her after sunset? Sleep. She had often
hoped that it was sleep, and nothing but sleep.
But now she did not hope that. Her life had centred
itself around a new interest, and one that she felt
could never die while that life lasted. She hoped
for a future now; for if there was a future for her,
there would be one for him, and then her day
would come, and where he was there she would be also.
Oh, sweet mockery, old and unsubstantial thought,
bright dream set halowise about the dull head of life!
Who has not dream it, but who can believe in it?
And yet, who shall say that it is not true? Though
philosophers and scientists smile and point in derision
to the gross facts and freaks that mark our passions,
is it not possible that there may be a place where
the love shall live when the lust has died; and where
Jess will find that she has not sat in vain in the
sunshine, throwing out her pure heart towards the
light of a happiness and a visioned glory whereof,
for some few minutes, the shadow seemed to lie within
her?
John had finished his pipe, and, although
she did not know it, was watching her face, which,
now when she was off her guard, was no longer impassive,
but seemed to mirror the tender and glorious hope that
was floating through her mind. Her lips were
slightly parted, and her wide eyes were full of a
soft strange light, while on the whole countenance
was stamped a look of eager thought and spiritualised
desire such as he had known portrayed in ancient masterpieces
upon the face of the Virgin Mother. Except as
regards her eyes and hair, Jess was not even a good-looking
person. But, at that moment, John thought that
her face was touched with a diviner beauty than he
had yet seen on the face of woman. It thrilled
him and appealed to him, not as Bessie’s beauty
had appealed, but to that other side of his nature,
of which Jess alone could turn the key. It was
more like the face of a spirit than that of a human
being, and it almost frightened him to see it.
“Jess,” he said at last, “what are
you thinking of?”
She started, and her face resumed
its normal expression. It was as though a mask
had been suddenly set upon it.
“Why do you ask?” she said.
“Because I want to know. I never saw you
look like that before.”
She laughed a little.
“You would call me foolish if
I told you what I was thinking about. Never mind,
it has gone wherever thoughts go. I will tell
you what I am thinking about now, which is that
it is about time we got out of this place. My
uncle and Bessie must be half distracted.”
“We’ve had more than two
months of it now. The relieving column can’t
be far off,” suggested John; for these foolish
people in Pretoria laboured under a firm belief that
one fine morning they would be gratified with a vision
of the light dancing down a long line of British bayonets,
and of Boers evaporating in every direction like storm
clouds before the sun.
Jess shook her head. She was
beginning to lose faith in relieving columns that
never came.
“If we don’t help ourselves,
my opinion is that we may stop here till we are starved
out, which in fact we are. However, it’s
no use talking about it, so I’m off to fetch
our rations. Let’s see, have you everything
you want?”
“Everything, thanks.”
“Well, then, mind you stop quiet till I come
back.”
“Why,” laughed John, “I am as strong
as a horse.”
“Possibly; but that is what
the doctor said, you know. Good-bye!” and
Jess took her big basket and started on what John used
feebly to call her “rational undertaking.”
She had not gone fifty paces from
the door before she suddenly caught sight of a familiar
form seated on a familiar pony. The form was fat
and jovial-looking, and the pony was small but also
fat. It was Hans Coetzee none other!
Jess could hardly believe her eyes.
Old Hans in Pretoria! What could it mean?
“Oom Coetzee! Oom
Coetzee!” she called, as he came ambling past
her, evidently heading for the Heidelberg road.
The old Boer pulled up his pony, and
gazed around him in a mystified fashion.
“Here, Oom Coetzee! Here!”
“Allemachter!”
he said, jerking his pony round. “It’s
you, Missie Jess, is it? Now who would have thought
of seeing you here?”
“Who would have thought of seeing
you here?” she answered.
“Yes, yes; it seems strange;
I dare say that it seems strange. But I am a
messenger of peace, like Uncle Noah’s dove in
the ark, you know. The fact is,” and he
glanced round to see if anybody was listening, “I
have been sent by the Government to arrange about
an exchange of prisoners.”
“The Government! What Government?”
“What Government? Why,
the Triumvirate, of course whom may the
Lord bless and prosper, as He did Jonah when he walked
on the wall of the city.”
“Joshua, when he walked round
the wall of the city,” suggested Jess.
“Jonah walked down the whale’s throat.”
“Ah! to be sure, so he did,
and blew a trumpet inside. I remember now; though
I am sure I don’t know how he did it. The
fact is that our glorious victories have quite confused
me. Ah! what a thing it is to be a patriot!
The dear Lord makes strong the arm of the patriot,
and takes care that he hits his man well in the middle.”
“You have turned wonderfully
patriotic all of a sudden, Oom Coetzee,”
said Jess tartly.
“Yes, missie, yes; I am a patriot
to the bone of my back! I hate the English Government;
damn the English Government! Let us have our land
back and our Volksraad. Almighty!
I saw who was in the right at Laing’s Nek there.
Ah, those poor rooibaatjes! I killed four of
them myself; two as they came up, and two as they
ran away, and the last one went head-over-heels like
a buck. Poor man! I cried for him afterwards.
I did not like going to fight at all, but Frank Muller
sent to me and said that if I did not go he would
have me shot. Ah, he is a devil of a man, that
Frank Muller! So I went, and when I saw how the
dear Lord had put it into the heart of the English
general to be a bigger fool even that day than he
is every day, and to try and drive us out of Laing’s
Nek with a thousand of his poor rooibaatjes,
then, I tell you, I saw where the right lay, and I
said, ’Damn the English Government! What
is the English Government doing here?’ and after
Ingogo I said it again.”
“Never mind all that, Oom
Coetzee,” broke in Jess. “I have heard
you tell a different tale before, and perhaps you
will again. How are my uncle and my sister?
Are they at the farm?”
“Almighty! you don’t suppose
that I have been there to see, do you? But, yes,
I have heard they are there. It is a nice place,
that Mooifontein, and I think that I shall buy it
when we have turned all you English people out of
the land. Frank Muller told me that they were
there. And now I must be getting on, or that
devil of a man, Frank Muller, will want to know what
I have been about.”
“Oom Coetzee,”
said Jess, “will you do something for me?
We are old friends, you know, and once I persuaded
my uncle to lend you five hundred pounds when all
your oxen died of the lungsick.”
“Yes, yes, it shall be paid
back one day when we have hunted the damned
Englishmen out of the country.” And he began
to gather up his reins preparatory to riding off.
“Will you do me a favour?”
said Jess, catching the pony by the bridle.
“What is it? What is it,
missie? I must be getting on. That devil
of a man, Frank Muller, is waiting for me with the
prisoners at the Rooihuis Kraal.”
“I want a pass for myself and
Captain Niel, and an escort. We wish to go home.”
The old Boer held up his fat hands in amazement.
“Almighty!” he said, “it
is impossible. A pass! who ever heard
of such a thing? Come, I must be going.”
“It is not impossible, Uncle
Coetzee, as you know,” said Jess. “Listen!
If I get that pass I will speak to my uncle about the
five hundred pounds. Perhaps he would not want
it all back again.”
“Ah!” said the Boer.
“Well, we are old friends, missie, and ’never
desert a friend,’ that is my saying. Almighty!
I must ride a hundred miles I will swim
through blood for a friend. Well, well, I must
see. It depends upon that devil of a man, Frank
Muller. Where are you to be found in
the white house yonder? Good. To-morrow the
escort will come in with the prisoners, and if I can
get it they will bring the pass. But, missie,
remember the five hundred pounds. If you do not
speak to your uncle about that I shall be even with
him. Almighty! what a thing it is to have a good
heart, and to love to help your friends! Well,
good-day, good-day,” and off he cantered on his
fat pony, his broad face shining with a look of unutterable
benevolence.
Jess cast a look of contempt after
him, and then went on towards the camp to fetch the
rations.
When she returned to “The Palatial,”
she told John what had taken place, and suggested
that it would be as well, in case there should be
a favourable reply to her request, to have everything
prepared for a start. Accordingly, the cart was
brought down and stood outside “The Palatial,”
where John unscrewed the patent caps and filled them
with castor-oil, and ordered Mouti to keep the horses,
which were all in health, though “poor”
from want of proper food, well within hail.
Meanwhile, old Hans pursued the jerky
tenour of his way for an hour or so, till he came
in sight of a small red house.
Presently, from the shadow in front
of the red house emerged a rider, mounted on a powerful
black horse. The horseman a stern,
handsome, bearded man put his hand above
his eyes to shade them from the sun, and gazed up
the road. Then he seemed suddenly to strike his
spurs into the horse, for the animal bounded forward
swiftly, and came sweeping towards Hans at a hand
gallop.
“Ah! it is that devil of a man,
Frank Muller!” ejaculated Coetzee. “Now
I wonder what he wants? I always feel cold down
the back when he comes near me.”
By this time the plunging black horse
was being reined up alongside of his pony so sharply
that it reared till its great hoofs were pawing the
air within a few inches of Hans’ head.
“Almighty!” said the old
man, tugging his pony round. “Be careful,
nephew, be careful; I do not wish to be crushed like
a beetle.”
Frank Muller for it was
he smiled. He had made his horse rear
purposely, in order to frighten the old man, whom he
knew to be an arrant coward.
“Why have you been so long?
and what have you done with the Englishmen? You
should have been back half an hour ago.”
“And so I should, nephew, and
so I should, if I had not been detained. Surely
you do not suppose that I would linger in the accursed
place? Bah,” and he spat upon the ground,
“it stinks of Englishmen. I cannot get
the taste of them out of my mouth.”
“You are a liar, Uncle Coetzee,”
was the cool answer. “English with the
English, Boer with the Boer. You blow neither
hot nor cold. Be careful lest I show you up.
I know you and your talk. Do you remember what
you were saying to the Englishman Niel in the inn-yard
at Wakkerstroom when you turned and saw me? I
heard, and I do not forget. You know what happens
to a ’land betrayer’?”
Hans’ teeth positively chattered,
and his florid face blanched with fear.
“What do you mean, nephew?” he asked.
“I ah! I
mean nothing. I was only speaking a word of warning
to you as a friend. I have heard things said
about you by ” and he dropped
his voice and whispered a name, at the sound of which
poor Hans turned whiter than ever.
“Well,” went on his tormentor,
when he had sufficiently enjoyed his terror, “what
sort of terms did you make in Pretoria?”
“Oh, good, nephew, good,”
he gabbled, delighted to find a fresh subject.
“I found the Englishmen supple as a tanned skin.
They will give up their twelve prisoners for our four.
The men are to be in by ten to-morrow. I told
their commandant about Laing’s Nek and Ingogo,
and he would not believe me. He thought I lied
like himself. They are getting hungry there now.
I saw a Hottentot I knew, and he told me that their
bones were beginning to show.”
“They will be through the skin
before long,” muttered Frank. “Well,
here we are at the house. The General is there.
He has just come up from Heidelberg, and you can make
your report to him. Did you find out about the
Englishman Captain Niel? Is it true
that he is dead?”
“No, he is not dead. By
the way, I met Oom Croft’s niece the
dark one. She is shut up there with the Captain,
and she begged me to try and get them a pass to go
home. Of course I told her that it was nonsense,
and that they must stop and starve with the others.”
Muller, who had been listening to
this last piece of information with intense interest,
suddenly checked his horse and answered:
“Did you? Then you are
a bigger fool than I thought you. Who gave you
authority to decide whether they should have a pass
or not?”