“Just where we halted ran a
little stream of water. I looked at it, and an
idea struck me: probably there would be no water
on the koppie. I suggested this to our captain,
and, acting on the hint, he directed all the men to
drink what they could, and also to fill the seven or
eight cooking pots which we carried with us with water.
Then came the crucial moment. How were we to
get possession of the koppie? When the captain
asked me, I said that I thought that we had better
march up and take it, and this accordingly we went
on to do. When we came to the narrow gateway
we were, as I expected stopped by two soldiers who
stood on guard there and asked our business.
The captain answered that we had changed our minds,
and would follow on to Wambe’s kraal.
The soldiers said no, we must now wait.
“To this we replied by pushing
them to one side and marching in single file through
the gateway, which was not distant more than a hundred
yards from the koppie. While we were getting through,
the men we had pushed away ran towards the town calling
for assistance, a call that was promptly responded
to, for in another minute we saw scores of armed men
running hard in our direction. So we ran too,
for the koppie. As soon as they understood what
we were after, which they did not at first, owing
to the dimness of the light, they did their best to
get there before us. But we had the start of
them, and with the exception of one unfortunate man
who stumbled and fell, we were well on to the koppie
before they arrived. This man they captured,
and when fighting began on the following morning,
and he refused to give any information, they killed
him. Luckily they had no time to torture him,
or they would certainly have done so, for these Matuku
people are very fond of torturing their enemies.
“When we reached the koppie,
the base of which covers about half an acre of ground,
the soldiers who had been trying to cut us off halted,
for they knew the strength of the position. This
gave us a few minutes before the light had quite vanished
to reconnoitre the place. We found that it was
unoccupied, fortified with a regular labyrinth of stone
walls, and contained three large caves and some smaller
ones. The next business was to post the soldiers
to such advantage as time would allow. My own
men I was careful to place quite at the top. They
were perfectly useless from terror, and I feared that
they might try to escape and give information of our
plans to Wambe. So I watched them like the apple
of my eye, telling them that should they dare to stir
they would be shot.
“Then it grew quite dark, and
presently out of the darkness I heard a voice it
was that of the leader of the soldiers who had escorted
us calling us to come down. We replied
that it was too dark to move, we should hit our feet
against the stones. He insisted upon our descending,
and we flatly refused, saying that if any attempt was
made to dislodge us we would fire. After that,
as they had no real intention of attacking us in the
dark, the men withdrew, but we saw from the fires which
were lit around that they were keeping a strict watch
upon our position.
“That night was a wearing one,
for we never quite knew how the situation was going
to develop. Fortunately we had some cooked food
with us, so we did not starve. It was lucky,
however, that we drunk our fill before coming up,
for, as I had anticipated, there was not a drop of
water on the koppie.
“At length the night wore away,
and with the first tinge of light I began to go my
rounds, and stumbling along the stony paths, to make
things as ready as I could for the attack, which I
felt sure would be delivered before we were two hours
older. The men were cramped and cold, and consequently
low-spirited, but I exhorted them to the best of my
ability, bidding them remember the race from which
they sprang, and not to show the white feather before
a crowd of Matuku dogs. At length it began to
grow light, and presently I saw long columns of men
advancing towards the koppie. They halted under
cover at a distance of about a hundred and fifty yards,
and just as the dawn broke a herald came forward and
called to us. Our captain stood up upon a rock
and answered him.
“‘These are the words
of Wambe,’ the herald said. ’Come
forth from the koppie, and give over the evil-doers,
and go in peace, or stay in the koppie and be slain.’
“‘It is too early to come
out as yet,’ answered our man in fine diplomatic
style. ’When the sun sucks up the mist then
we will come out. Our limbs are stiff with cold.’
“‘Come forth even now,’ said the
herald.
“‘Not if I know it, my
boy,’ said I to myself; but the captain replied
that he would come out when he thought proper, and
not before.
“‘Then make ready to die,’
said the herald, for all the world like the villain
of a transpontine piece, and majestically stalked back
to the soldiers.
“I made my final arrangements,
and looked anxiously at the mountain crest a couple
of miles or so away, from which the mist was now beginning
to lift, but no column of smoke could I see. I
whistled, for if the attacking force had been delayed
or made any mistake, our position was likely to grow
rather warm. We had barely enough water to wet
the mouths of the men, and when once it was finished
we could not hold the place for long in that burning
heat.
“At length, just as the sun
rose in glory over the heights behind us, the Matuku
soldiers, of whom about fifteen hundred were now assembled,
set up a queer whistling noise, which ended in a chant.
Then some shots were fired, for the Matuku had a few
guns, but without effect, though one bullet passed
just by a man’s head.
“‘Now they are going to
begin,’ I thought to myself, and I was not far
wrong, for in another minute the body of men divided
into three companies, each about five hundred strong,
and, heralded by a running fire, charged at us on
three sides. Our men were now all well under
cover, and the fire did us no harm. I mounted
on a rock so as to command a view of as much of the
koppie and plain as possible, and yelled to our men
to reserve their fire till I gave the word, and then
to shoot low and load as quickly as possible.
I knew that, like all natives, they were sure to be
execrable shots, and that they were armed with weapons
made out of old gas-pipes, so the only chance of doing
execution was to let the enemy get right on to us.
“On they came with a rush; they
were within eighty yards now, and as they drew near
the point of attack, I observed that they closed their
ranks, which was so much the better for us.
“‘Shall we not fire, my father?’
sung out the captain.
“‘No, confound you!’ I answered.
“‘Sixty yards fifty forty thirty.
Fire, you scoundrels!’ I yelled, setting the
example by letting off both barrels of my elephant
gun into the thickest part of the company opposite
to me.
“Instantly the place rang out
with the discharge of two hundred and odd guns, while
the air was torn by the passage of every sort of missile,
from iron pot legs down to slugs and pebbles coated
with lead. The result was very prompt. The
Matukus were so near that we could not miss them,
and at thirty yards a lead-coated stone out of a gas-pipe
is as effective as a Martini rifle, or more so.
Over rolled the attacking soldiers by the dozen, while
the survivors, fairly frightened, took to their heels.
We plied them with shot till they were out of range I
made it very warm for them with the elephant gun,
by the way and then we loaded up in quite
a cheerful frame of mind, for we had not lost a man,
whereas I could count more than fifty dead and wounded
Matukus. The only thing that damped my ardour
was that, stare as I would, I could see no column
of smoke upon the mountain crest.
“Half an hour elapsed before
any further steps were taken against us. Then
the attacking force adopted different tactics.
Seeing that it was very risky to try to rush us in
dense masses, they opened out into skirmishing order
and ran across the open space in lots of five and six.
As it happened, right at the foot of the koppie the
ground broke away a little in such fashion that it
was almost impossible for us to search it effectually
with our fire. On the hither side of this dip
Wambe’s soldiers were now congregating in considerable
numbers. Of course we did them as much damage
as we could while they were running across, but this
sort of work requires good shots, and that was just
what we had not got. Another thing was, that
so many of our men would insist upon letting off the
things they called guns at every little knot of the
enemy that ran across. Thus, the first few lots
were indeed practically swept away, but after that,
as it took a long while to load the gas-pipes and old
flint muskets, those who followed got across in comparative
safety. For my own part, I fired away with the
elephant gun and repeating carbine till they grew
almost too hot to hold, but my individual efforts could
do nothing to stop such a rush, or perceptibly to
lessen the number of our enemies.
“At length there were at least
a thousand men crowded into the dip of ground within
a few yards of us, whence those of them who had guns
kept up a continued fusillade upon the koppie.
They killed two of my bearers in this way, and wounded
a third, for being at the top of the koppie these
men were most exposed to the fire from the dip at its
base. Seeing that the situation was growing most
serious, at length, by the dint of threats and entreaties,
I persuaded the majority of our people to cease firing
useless shots, to reload, and prepare for the rush.
Scarcely had I done so when the enemy came for us
with a roar. I am bound to say that I should
never have believed that Matukus had it in them to
make such a determined charge. A large party
rushed round the base of the koppie, and attacked
us in flank, while the others swarmed wherever they
could get a foothold, so that we were taken on every
side.
“‘Fire!’
I cried, and we did with terrible effect. Many
of their men fell, but though we checked we could
not stop them. They closed up and rushed the
first fortification, killing a good number of its defenders.
It was almost all cold steel work now, for we had no
time to reload, and that suited the Butiana habits
of fighting well enough, for the stabbing assegai
is a weapon which they understand. Those of our
people who escaped from the first line of walls took
refuge in the second, where I stood myself, encouraging
them, and there the fight raged fiercely. Occasionally
parties of the enemy would force a passage, only to
perish on the hither side beneath the Butiana spears.
But still they kept it up, and I saw that, fight as
we would, we were doomed. We were altogether
outnumbered, and to make matters worse, fresh bodies
of soldiers were pouring across the plain to the assistance
of our assailants. So I made up my mind to direct
a retreat into the caves, and there expire in a manner
as heroic as circumstances would allow; and while
mentally lamenting my hard fate and reflecting on my
sins I fought away like a fiend. It was then,
I remember, that I shot my friend the captain of our
escort of the previous day. He had caught sight
of me, and making a vicious dig at my stomach with
a spear (which I successfully dodged), shouted out,
or rather began to shout out, one of his unpleasant
allusions to the ‘Thing that ’
He never got as far as ‘bites,’ because
I shot him after ‘that.’
“Well, the game was about up.
Already I saw one man throw down his spear in token
of surrender which act of cowardice cost
him his life, by the way when suddenly
a shout arose.
“‘Look at the mountain,’
they cried; ’there is an impi on the mountain
side.’
“I glanced up, and there sure
enough, about half-way down the mountain, nearing
the first fortification, the long-plumed double line
of Nala’s warriors was rushing down to battle,
the bright light of the morning glancing on their
spears. Afterwards we discovered that the reason
of their delay was that they had been stopped by a
river in flood, and could not reach the mountain crest
by dawn. When they did reach it, however, they
saw instantly that the fight was already going on,
was ‘in flower,’ as they put it, and so
advanced at once without waiting to light signal-fires.
“Meanwhile they had been observed
from the town, and parties of soldiers were charging
up the steep side of the hill, to occupy the schanses,
and the second line of fortifications behind them.
The first line they did not now attempt to reach or
defend; Nala pressed them too close. But they
got to the schanses or pits protected with stone walls,
and constructed to hold from a dozen to twenty men,
and soon began to open fire from them, and from isolated
rocks. I turned my eyes to the gates of the town,
which were placed to the north and south. Already
they were crowded with hundreds of fugitive women
and children flying to the rocks and caves for shelter
from the foe.
“As for ourselves, the appearance
of Nala’s impi produced a wonderful change for
the better in our position. The soldiers attacking
us turned, realizing that the town was being assailed
from the rear, and clambering down the koppie streamed
off to protect their homes against this new enemy.
In five minutes there was not a man left except those
who would move no more, or were too sorely wounded
to escape. I felt inclined to ejaculate ‘Saved!’
like the gentleman in the play, but did not because
the occasion was too serious. What I did do was
to muster all the men and reckon up our losses.
They amounted to fifty-one killed and wounded, sixteen
men having been killed outright. Then I sent men
with the cooking-pots to the stream of water, and
we drank. This done I set my bearers, being the
most useless part of the community, from a fighting
point of view, to the task of attending the injured,
and turned to watch the fray.
“By this time Nala’s impi
had climbed the first line of fortifications without
opposition, and was advancing in a long line upon the
schanses or pits which were scattered about between
it and the second line, singing a war chant as it
came. Presently puffs of smoke began to start
from the schanses, and with my glasses I could see
several of our men falling over. Then as they
came opposite a schanse that portion of the long line
of warriors would thicken up and charge it with a wild
rush. I could see them leap on to the walls and
vanish into the depths beneath, some of their number
falling backward on each occasion, shot or stabbed
to death.
“Next would come another act
in the tragedy. Out from the hither side of the
schanse would pour such of its defenders as were left
alive, perhaps three or four and perhaps a dozen,
running for dear life, with the war dogs on their
tracks. One by one they would be caught, then
up flashed the great spear and down fell the pursued dead.
I saw ten of our men leap into one large schanse,
but though I watched for some time nobody came out.
Afterwards we inspected the place and found these men
all dead, together with twenty-three Matukus.
Neither side would give in, and they had fought it
out to the bitter end.
“At last they neared the second
line of fortifications, behind which the whole remaining
Matuku force, numbering some two thousand men, was
rapidly assembling. One little pause to get their
breath, and Nala’s men came at it with a rush
and a long wild shout of ‘Bulala Matuku’
(kill the Matuku) that went right through me, thrilling
every nerve. Then came an answering shout, and
the sounds of heavy firing, and presently I saw our
men retreating, somewhat fewer in numbers than they
had advanced. Their welcome had been a warm one
for the Matuku fight splendidly behind walls.
This decided me that it was necessary to create a diversion;
if we did not do so it seemed very probable that we
should be worsted after all. I called to the
captain of our little force, and rapidly put the position
before him.
“Seeing the urgency of the occasion,
he agreed with me that we must risk it, and in two
minutes more, with the exception of my own men, whom
I left to guard the wounded, we were trotting across
the open space and through the deserted town towards
the spot where the struggle was taking place, some
seven hundred yards away. In six or eight minutes
we reached a group of huts it was a head
man’s kraal, that was situated about
a hundred and twenty yards behind the fortified wall,
and took possession of it unobserved. The enemy
was too much engaged with the foe in front of him
to notice us, and besides, the broken ground rose in
a hog-back shape between. There we waited a minute
or two and recovered our breath, while I gave my directions.
So soon as we heard the Butiana impi begin to charge
again, we were to run out in a line to the brow of
the hogback and pour our fire into the mass of defenders
behind the wall. Then the guns were to be thrown
down and we must charge with the assegai. We
had no shields, but that could not be helped; there
would be no time to reload the guns, and it was absolutely
necessary that the enemy should be disconcerted at
the moment when the main attack was delivered.
“The men, who were as plucky
a set of fellows as ever I saw, and whose blood was
now thoroughly up, consented to this scheme, though
I could see that they thought it rather a large order,
as indeed I did myself. But I knew that if the
impi was driven back a second time the game would
be played, and for me at any rate it would be a case
of the ’Thing that bites,’ and this sure
and certain knowledge filled my breast with valour.
“We had not long to wait.
Presently we heard the Butiana war-song swelling loud
and long; they had commenced their attack. I made
a sign, and the hundred and fifty men, headed by myself,
poured out of the kraal, and getting into a rough
line ran up the fifty or sixty yards of slope that
intervened between ourselves and the crest of the hog-backed
ridge. In thirty seconds we were there, and immediately
beyond us was the main body of the Matuku host waiting
the onslaught of the enemy with guns and spears.
Even now they did not see us, so intent were they upon
the coming attack. I signed to my men to take
careful aim, and suddenly called out to them to fire,
which they did with a will, dropping thirty or forty
Matukus.
“‘Charge!’
I shouted, again throwing down my smoking rifle and
drawing my revolver, an example which they followed,
snatching up their spears from the ground where they
had placed them while they fired. The men set
up a savage whoop, and we started. I saw the Matuku
soldiers wheel around in hundreds, utterly taken aback
at this new development of the situation. And
looking over them, before we had gone twenty yards
I saw something else. For of a sudden, as though
they had risen from the earth, there appeared above
the wall hundreds of great spears, followed by hundreds
of savage faces shadowed with drooping plumes.
With a yell they sprang upon the wall shaking their
broad shields, and with a yell they bounded from it
straight into our astonished foes.
“Crash! we were in them
now, and fighting like demons. Crash! from
the other side. Nala’s impi was at its work,
and still the spears and plumes appeared for a moment
against the brown background of the mountain, and
then sprang down and rushed like a storm upon the foe.
The great mob of men turned this way and turned that
way, astonished, bewildered, overborne by doubt and
terror.
“Meanwhile the slayers stayed
not their hands, and on every side spears flashed,
and the fierce shout of triumph went up to heaven.
There too on the wall stood Maiwa, a white garment
streaming from her shoulders, an assegai in her hand,
her breast heaving, her eyes flashing. Above all
the din of battle I could catch the tones of her clear
voice as she urged the soldiers on to victory.
But victory was not yet. Wambe’s soldiers
gathered themselves together, and bore our men back
by the sheer weight of numbers. They began to
give, then once more they rallied, and the fight hung
doubtfully.
“‘Slay, you war-whelps,’
cried Maiwa from the wall. ’Are you afraid,
you women, you chicken-hearted women! Strike home,
or die like dogs! What you give way!
Follow me, children of Nala.’ And with one
long cry she leapt from the wall as leaps a stricken
antelope, and holding the spear poised rushed right
into the thickest of the fray. The warriors saw
her, and raised such a shout that it echoed like thunder
against the mountains. They massed together,
and following the flutter of her white robe crashed
into the dense heart of the foe. Down went the
Matuku before them like trees before a whirlwind.
Nothing could stand in the face of such a rush as
that. It was as the rush of a torrent bursting
its banks. All along their line swept the wild
desperate charge; and there, straight in the forefront
of the battle, still waved the white robe of Maiwa.
“Then they broke, and, stricken
with utter panic, Wambe’s soldiers streamed
away a scattered crowd of fugitives, while after them
thundered the footfall of the victors.
“The fight was over, we had
won the day; and for my part I sat down upon a stone
and wiped my forehead, thanking Providence that I had
lived to see the end of it. Twenty minutes later
Nala’s warriors began to return panting.
‘Wambe’s soldiers had taken to the bush
and the caves,’ they said, ‘where they
had not thought it safe to follow them,’ adding
significantly, that many had stopped on the way.
“I was utterly dazed, and now
that the fight was over my energy seemed to have left
me, and I did not pay much attention, till presently
I was aroused by somebody calling me by my name.
I looked up, and saw that it was the chief Nala himself,
who was bleeding from a flesh wound in his arm.
By his side stood Maiwa panting, but unhurt, and wearing
on her face a proud and terrifying air.
“‘They are gone, Macumazahn,’
said the chief; ’there is little to fear from
them, their heart is broken. But where is Wambe
the chief? and where is the white man thou
camest to save?’
“‘I know not,’ I answered.
“Close to where we stood lay
a Matuku, a young man who had been shot through the
fleshy part of the calf. It was a trifling wound,
but it prevented him from running away.
“‘Say, thou dog,’
said Nala, stalking up to him and shaking his red
spear in his face, ’say, where is Wambe?
Speak, or I slay thee. Was he with the soldiers?’
“‘Nay, lord, I know not,’
groaned the terrified man, ’he fought not with
us; Wambe has no stomach for fighting. Perchance
he is in his kraal yonder, or in the cave behind
the kraal,’ and he pointed to a small enclosure
on the hillside, about four hundred yards to the right
of where we were.
“‘Let us go and see,’ said Nala,
summoning his soldiers.”