MEASURING THE ENEMY--POISONED
ARROWS--SUBSTITUTES FOR WATER--OSTRICHES--
A SAD CASUALTY--A NEW MODE OF DEERSTALKING--OMATOKO
TRIUMPHANT.
Warley was still resting, half sitting,
half kneeling, on a large stone by the side of the
pool, when the sound of voices was heard, and Lavie
came up, accompanied by the two boys. They were
all evidently in high spirits. The doctor carried
over his shoulder the carcass of a goat, which was
large and heavy enough to give him plenty of trouble;
and Wilmore and Nick each led a young kid by an extempore
halter of rushes. The pockets of all three were
distended by a goodly heap of wild medlars, which,
in accordance with Omatoko’s suggestion, they
had gathered, and which they had found extremely refreshing.
“Hallo, Omatoko!” shouted
Gilbert as they approached the pool. “Just
come here and take charge of this chap, will you?
You are more used to this kind of thing than I am.
He has done nothing but attempt to bolt the whole
way home. I suppose we must eat up the old lady
first, otherwise I should suggest that this fellow
should be roasted for supper, if only to make sure
that he won’t run away again.”
The Hottentot came out from the hut
as he spoke. “One, two, three goat,”
he said, “dat good, plenty food, all time we
stay here.”
“Ay, ay,” said Nick, “they
say it is an ill wind that blows no one good; and
the hurricane we had an hour or two ago, is, I suppose,
a case in point. Any way, it was obliging enough
to blow down a big tree, which fell upon the goat
there, and finished her outright. She’s
a trifle old and tough, I expect; but she’ll
make first-rate mulligatawney soup nevertheless; and
there will be her two kids, as tender as spring lamb,
into the bargain. It makes one’s mouth
water to think of them. And, then, there’s
those medlars but, hallo! I say, Ernest,
what is the matter? Why, you look as pale and
weak as if you were just recovering from a typhus
fever. What’s befallen you?”
“I have had a very narrow escape
from a most terrible death, Nick,” returned
Warley, gravely, “and my nerves haven’t
got over it.”
“Hallo! what?” again exclaimed
Gilbert. “Escape from death, do you say?
Why, what has happened?”
“Just go in there into
that hut to the right, and you’ll see,”
was the answer.
Lavie and Wilmore had by this time
learned the main outline of what had occurred, from
the Hottentot, and they all went into the cottage to
examine the remains of the great snake.
“A proper brute, that,”
observed Gilbert, as they stood by the side of the
reptile, which had by this time ceased to wriggle.
“That is the biggest snake I ever came across.
There’s his head gone, and a bit of his tail;
but I don’t think what remains can be less than
twenty feet. Lion, old fellow,” he continued,
caressing the dog while Frank patted his head, “you
did that well, and shall have a first-chop supper.”
“We can ascertain its length
exactly,” said Lavie; “I have got a yard
measure here; and here too is the remainder of the
tail. Stretch the body straight out, Frank,
and I’ll soon tell you the measurement.”
The serpent was accordingly measured,
and was found to be some inches more than nineteen
feet long.
“What kind of snake is it?”
asked Frank, when this point had been determined.
“A python, or boa-constrictor,
no doubt,” answered the surgeon; “they
give them other names in these parts, but that is the
creature. No other description of serpents that
I ever heard of attempts to crush up its prey by muscular
pressure.”
“But serpents which do that
are seldom or never venomous, are they?” inquired
Wilmore.
“I believe not,” answered
Lavie, “but that point has been disputed.
Omatoko calls the reptile an `ondara,’ and insists
upon it that its bite is not only poisonous, but causes
certain death. It may be so. It is evident
that it would have bitten Ernest if it could; and serpents
that are devoid of venom do not often bite.
Well, I suppose now that we have done measuring the
snake, we may throw him away. The Hottentots,
I believe, eat their flesh. But I conclude none
of us have any great inclination to make our dinner
off him.”
“No, thank you, sir,” said Frank, “not
for me.”
“Nor for me either, doctor,”
cried Nick. “I think I’d rather go
without food for a week. Here, Ernest, old fellow you
had better go and lie down a bit. You look as
if you were having it out with the python still.”
Warley was too unwell to rejoin the
party all that day and the next. The shock he
had undergone was a very severe one; and would in all
likelihood have prostrated any one of his companions
for a far longer period. He lay under the shade
of the trees on the soft grass the whole day, neither
speaking himself nor heeding the remarks of others.
Always inclined to be serious and thoughtful, this
incident had had the effect of turning his mind to
subjects for which his light-hearted companions had
little relish, and which Lavie himself could hardly
follow. Even when he resumed the old round of
occupations, as he did in the course of the third
day, Frank and Nick noticed a change in him, which
they could not understand.
Meanwhile Omatoko’s bow and
arrows proceeded rapidly, and were completed on the
morning of the third day. Their construction
was a great puzzle to the English lads. The
bow was a little less than three feet long, and perhaps
three-quarters of an inch thick neatly enough
shaped, and rounded off, but looking little better
than a child’s toy. Omatoko had strung
it with some sinew from the carcass of the goat.
He had looped this over the upper end of the bow,
and rolled it round the other in such a fashion that
by merely twisting the string like a tourniquet, it
might be strung to any degree of tension. The
arrows too were wholly different from any they had
ever seen. The strong reeds brought from the
edge of the water had been cut off in lengths of about
two feet. At one end the notch was inserted;
to the other a movable head, made of bone, was attached,
which stuck fast enough to the shaft during its flight
through the air, but which became detached from it
as soon as it was fixed in the body of any animal.
These bone-heads, Omatoko told them, were always
dipped in some poison, which caused even a slight
puncture made by them to be fatal. The entrails
of the kaa, or poison grub, were considered the most
efficient for this purpose; but this was not to be
met with at all times or in all places, and the juice
of the euphorbia or the venom of serpents was sometimes
substituted. In the present instance he meant
to steep the bone-heads in the poison of the ondara,
which he had carefully preserved. Omatoko assured
them that when they set out for his village (as they
probably would on the following day), they would soon
have an opportunity of testing the efficiency of his
weapons, and laughingly challenged them to a trial
of skill between his bow and arrows and their guns.
On the following morning accordingly
they resumed their route. Each of them carried
some of the flesh of the kids, a dozen medlars, and
a melon. It was found that the strength of the
Hottentot was now so far restored that he could keep
up with the usual pace at which the others walked,
and only required a rest of half an hour or so, every
two or three miles. They accomplished about
a dozen miles that day; and at nightfall had reached
a wide stony plain, covered here and there with patches
of grass, but entirely destitute of shrub or tree.
Omatoko pointed out a place where a deep projecting
slab of rock, resting on two enormous stones, and
bearing a rude resemblance to a giant’s chimney-piece,
afforded as convenient a shelter for the night as might
be desired. It would effectually protect the
party from rain and wind, nor was there the least
fear of wild animals, as none were ever known to come
within two or three miles of the spot, there being
neither pasturage nor water.
“No water,” repeated Frank,
“that’s rather a doubtful advantage, isn’t
it? What are we to drink, I wonder?”
The Hottentot only grinned in reply;
and disengaging the knife which always hung at Nick’s
girdle, began grubbing in the ground among the stones.
In a few minutes he dug up several round, or rather
spherical roots, two or three feet in circumference.
These he cut open with the knife, displaying the
inside, which had a white appearance, and was soft
and pulpy. The boys had no sooner applied this
to their lips than they broke out into exclamations
of delight. “That’s your sort,”
exclaimed Nick; “it’s like a delicious
melon, only it’s twice as refreshing.”
“Omatoko, you’re a trump,”
cried Frank. “You’d make a fortune,
if you could only sell these in Covent Garden market.
Nobody that could get them would ever drink water
again.”
“What are they called, Charles,”
asked Warley. “Are they to be met with
elsewhere in South Africa, or only here?”
“The root is called the `markwhae,’
I believe,” answered the doctor, “and
it is to be found in almost every neighbourhood where
there is a want of water. It is another of those
wonderful provisions of Divine Wisdom for the wants
of its creatures, with which this land abounds.
In some parts, such of the wild animals as are herbivorous,
are continually digging up and devouring these roots.
Vangelt told me that he once came upon a tribe of
Hottentots which subsisted entirely without water,
the succulent plants supplying even the cattle with
sufficient liquid.”
“Well, that is very wonderful,”
said Frank. “I declare I feel more refreshed
by that one root, than if I had drunk a pailful of
water. Are there any more of these roots on
the way to your village, Omatoko?”
“Omatoko’s village, one,
two days away. No roots, plenty water,”
returned the Hottentot. “Well, that will
do as well, I suppose. But this is a thing worth
knowing, if one should find one’s self in a place
where there is no water.”
The next day at sunrise they resumed
their way, and made their mid-day halt on the skirts
of a dense growth of mingled aloes and underwood,
which was scarcely anywhere more than five feet in
height. Here they sat down by the side of a
spring, which gushed forth from a limestone rock into
a small natural basin, whence it spread itself in all
directions, sustaining a rich emerald carpet for a
few feet round, but soon disappearing in the sand.
“Plenty of visitors here at
night,” remarked Warley, gazing curiously round
him on the numerous footmarks of all shapes and sizes,
with which the borders of the spring were indented.
“It must be a curious sight to witness such
an omnium gatherum. Only I suppose the
more timid animals make sure that the lions and leopards
are well out of the way, before they venture here
themselves.”
“Of what creature is that the
spoor?” asked Frank, pointing to a broad, deep
mark, much larger than the rest. “That
is the track of some beast which I do not recognise.”
“It is not the track of a beast,”
said the surgeon. “Unless I am mistaken,
that is the spoor of the ostrich is it not,
Omatoko?”
“Ya, ostrich plenty
’bout here. See yonder.” He
pointed as he spoke to a distant part of the bush,
where the heads of a troop of ostriches might be seen
as they stalked easily along, browsing as they went.
“Eh, ostriches! You don’t
mean it,” exclaimed Frank, starting up in great
excitement. “I never saw an ostrich.
I want to see one beyond anything! Couldn’t
we shoot one, Charles? Are they quite out of
shot?”
“Much too far to make it worth
while trying,” said Lavie. “But we
might bring one or two down by a stratagem, perhaps.
If you four spread yourselves in all directions to
the right yonder, and drive them this way, I could
hide behind the rock there and bring one down as they
went past. Couldn’t that be managed, Omatoko?”
“One, two, three, four drive
ostrich this way. Omatoko kill one, two
with bow and arrow. Omatoko no miss.”
“What, do you think your bow
and arrow better than Charles’s rifle?”
exclaimed Nick; “well, that is coming it strong,
anyhow.”
“I tell you what,” said
Warley, “this will be a famous opportunity for
you to have the match out for which you were so anxious
the other day. You and Charles shall both hide
behind the rock there, and Frank, Nick, and myself
will fetch a compass and drive the ostriches past you.
Then we shall see which will take the longest and
truest shot. What do you say, Charles?”
“I have no objection, I am sure,”
said Lavie, laughing; “only I hope the trial
won’t go against me. It would be most ignominious
to be beaten by a bow and arrows. I should never
hear the last of it, I expect!”
“Don’t be afraid, Charles,
there’s no fear of that,” returned Warley,
reciprocating the laugh. “Well, now let
us be off. If you’ll take the right side,
Nick, and you, Frank, the left, I’ll take the
middle, and we’ll come upon them all together.
Lion had better stay here.”
The three lads set out accordingly,
creeping noiselessly through the cover of the scrub,
at a distance too far for even the quick-eared ostriches
to perceive them, until they had all attained their
appointed places. Then they advanced on the
birds, shouting and hallooing, and waving sticks over
their heads.
The ostriches instantly took to flight
after their fashion, skimming along with expanded
wings, and covering twelve or fourteen feet at every
stride. They passed the rock behind which the
two marksmen were concealed, at a speed which would
have far outstripped the swiftest racehorse at Newmarket.
But as they darted by, there came the crack of the
doctor’s rifle, and at the same moment Omatoko’s
arrow leaped from his bow. Both missiles hit
their mark, but with a different result. Charles’s
bullet struck the bird he aimed at just under the wing;
the shot was mortal, and the ostrich staggering forward
a few paces fell dead to the ground Omatoko’s
arrow pierced his quarry through the neck, and the
barbed point remained in the wound, rendering death
equally certain, but not so speedy. Perceiving
that the ostrich did not fall, Lion sprang after it,
heedless of the doctor’s order to him to return,
and a sharp chase began. The ostrich would speedily
have distanced its pursuer, if it had not been for
the pain and exhaustion of the wound it had received,
and the effect of the poison, which had now begun to
work. The dog soon began to gain ground, and
presently came up with the fugitive; which turned
to bay at last in the agony of its rage and fear.
Lion had never been trained for the chase of the ostrich,
which can only be approached with safety from behind.
As he came bounding up, the bird kicked at him, throwing
its leg forward as a man does, and with such tremendous
force that the mastiff fell to the ground on the instant,
bleeding and stunned, if not dead. Then the wounded
bird staggered away into the scrub, its strength and
courage giving way more and more every moment.
The boys had no time to congratulate
their friend on his victory, or even to examine the
fallen ostrich. Their thoughts were wholly occupied
with the disaster which had befallen Lion.
“Lion, Lion, dear old boy, how
could you be so foolish?” exclaimed Frank, as
he picked up the bleeding and insensible body of his
favourite. “I am afraid he’s killed.
That kick would have finished a horse, let alone
a dog. What fearful strength those creatures
must have! Oh, Lion, Lion, my poor old fellow!
I’d rather have broken my leg any day than
lost you.”
“Let me take a look at him,”
said Lavie, who had now come up. “All
depends on where the ostrich’s foot struck him.
No, I don’t think he’s killed, Frank,”
he added presently, after feeling the animal all over.
“There are a couple of ribs broken, and a large
bruise in the side, but that seems to be the extent
of the casualty. I’ll set the ribs, and
he must keep quiet for some days, and then I expect
he’ll be right again.”
“Oh, I am so glad,” said
Wilmore. “Yes, you’re right, Charles,”
he continued, as the dog opened its eyes again and
attempted to get up, but fell back on the grass with
a low moan of pain. “Never mind, Lion,
we’ll nurse you through it, old chap, won’t
we?”
“Relieve each other in alternate
watches, change bandages, and apply fresh lotion every
three hours,” suggested Nick. “But
with all possible respect for Lion, how are we to
do that? Where are the bandages, and where the
lotion? Nay, where is the hospital bed to which
the patient is to be consigned?”
“Omatoko must put up a hut,
and we must stay here until Lion can go with us,”
said Wilmore gruffly. “If we could wait
three days for a pagan Hottentot, we may wait as many,
surely, for a Christian dog!”
“I don’t think you’ll
get Omatoko to stay here for all the dogs that ever
were whelped,” said Nick. “He’s
in too much of a hurry to put salt on the tails of
those Bushmen.”
“He must stay, and he shall!”
returned Wilmore angrily; “I won’t have
the dog thrown over. We are four, and he is only
one. Stay he shall, I say.”
“Gently, Frank,” said
the doctor. “I’m against throwing
Lion over as much as you are, but I don’t see
how we can stay here. The dog won’t be
fit to walk no, not a hundred yards for
this fortnight, and it would probably kill him, if
he attempted it.”
“What’s to be done, then?” rejoined
Frank shortly.
“Do as we did with Omatoko.
Make a litter and carry him to the Hottentot kraal.
It is not more than seven or eight miles, and we can
relieve one another. Luckily he is not such a
weight as Omatoko. I suppose that will satisfy
you, won’t it?”
“Yes, of course, Charles,”
said Wilmore. “It is very kind of you.
I am afraid I was rather cross, wasn’t I? but
you see
“All right, old fellow, I know
you’re fond of Lion; so we all are, though perhaps
not so fond. Do you go and cut some of
the osiers there, Omatoko will soon make them
into a basket, large enough to hold the dog, and we’ll
carry it on a pole slung across our shoulders.
Meanwhile I’ll dress the old fellow’s wounds.”
Omatoko proved to be as skilful a
basket-maker as Lavie had predicted; and the party
were making preparations for a start, when the Hottentot,
who had just returned from the osier bed with a last
supply of twigs, announced that there was a herd of
noble koodoos about half a mile off, feeding on a
patch of sweet grass. They were rare in that
part of the country, and the best of eating.
“Suppose we kill two, three, four of them;
my people like them much. They come fetch them.”
“Two, three, or four,”
exclaimed Frank “who is going to do
that? Why, these koodoos, if I have been told
rightly, are the shyest of all the boks, and won’t
let any one come near them. We might possibly
get one shot, but certainly not more.”
“Me do it,” said the Hottentot;
“no want help; white boy only sit still.”
There seemed no reason for refusing
his request, and the boys, laying aside the various
articles with which they had loaded themselves, watched
his proceedings with a good deal of interest.
He first took the knife, and going to the spot where
the body of the ostrich was lying, passed it round
the creature’s throat and under the wings, severing
these parts from the rest of the carcass. He
then slit open the long neck from top to bottom, removed
the bones and flesh, and introduced in their place
a strong stick, over which he neatly sewed up the skin
again. He then cleared away in like manner the
blood and the fat from the back and wings, and sewed
another pad of skin under them. These preparations
took a considerable time; but Omatoko assured the
lookers-on that there was little fear of the koodoos
leaving their present pasture for several hours to
come at the least, unless they should be molested.
The Hottentot had now nearly done
his work; his last act was to gather up in his hand
some light-tinted earth, which was nearly of the same
colour as an ostrich’s legs, and dipping it in
water, besmeared his own supporters with it.
Then taking his bow and arrows in one hand, and the
back and neck of the slain bird in the other, he crept
down into the bush. Presently the boys saw the
figure of an ostrich appear above the shrubs and stalk
leisurely along, pecking at the herbage right and left,
as it advanced.
“That can’t be Omatoko,
to be sure,” cried Frank in amazement; “that’s
a real ostrich! Where can he be hiding?”
“He is waiting for the others,”
said Warley. “See yonder, the whole flock
are returning. Omatoko will no doubt slip in
among them. We shall distinguish him, if we
watch narrowly.”
It seemed as if Ernest was right.
The ostriches came straggling back through the bush,
and the one they had noticed first lingered about till
they had overtaken him, when he accompanied them as
they strayed on towards the koodoos.
“Do you see Omatoko?”
asked Nick, as the ostriches and boks became mingled
together.
“No, I don’t,” said
Frank, “He can’t have come out yet.
He is biding his time, I expect.”
At this moment there came a faint
sound like the distant twanging of a bow, and one
of the boks was seen to fall. The herd started
and looked suspiciously round them; and the ostriches
seemed to share their uneasiness. But there
was no enemy in sight, and after a few minutes of
anxious hesitation, they recommenced browsing.
A second twang was succeeded by a second fall, and
the boks again tossed their heads and snuffed the
air, prepared for immediate flight. They still
lingered, however, until the overthrow of a third
of their number effectually roused them. They
bounded off at their utmost speed, but not before a
fourth shaft had laid one of the fugitives low.
Then the lads, full of astonishment and admiration,
came racing up, and Omatoko, throwing off his disguise, exclaimed exultingly
“Two, three, four; Omatoko said
`four.’ White boy believe Omatoko now!”
“He has you there, Frank,”
said Nick, laughing; “but I must own I could
not have believed it possible, if I had not seen it.”
“Live and learn,” said
Lavie. “I had seen it before, or I might
have been of your mind. Well, Omatoko, what
now? We have stayed so long that. We shan’t
be able to reach your village to-night, if we carry
the dog.”
“Omatoko go alone. He
bring men to-morrow; carry koodoo, dog and all.”
“Very good,” said the
doctor, “and we’ll camp here. That
will suit us all.”