For the moment the Intelligence officer
could ill disguise his astonishment. Here, standing
in front of him, was the girl who had taught him his
first lesson in staff jurisprudence. The memory
of the incidents at the farmhouse, her petulance with
the Tiger, her tears for her lover, had been almost
effaced by the vicissitudes of the last forty-eight
hours. If he had ever thought of the girl at all,
it had been in the same spirit as a mariner recalls
a passing ship, whose shapely lines were barely distinguishable
in the night. His surprise was such that he could
only marvel that while, travel-stained and dishevelled,
he had arrived at Britstown with an effort, she had
already reached that goal, and, to judge from the studied
neatness of her attire, had reached it with consummate
ease. Her smile and attitude as she held out
her hand to her visitor expressed satisfaction at
the meeting a satisfaction tempered with
a determination to show a front which should declare
a full measure of resistance. Taking advantage
of his officer’s surprise, the Tiger discreetly
withdrew.
Intelligence Officer. “Miss
Pretorius, how did you get here?”
Miss Pretorius. “Quite
simply. Partly on horseback, partly in a Cape
cart.”
I. O. (recovering somewhat)
“Naturally; I did not anticipate that you had
walked. But with what object?”
Miss P. (the corners of
her pretty mouth sinking in defiance) “I
might easily have walked, and arrived before a British
column. As to my object in coming here, surely
your Africander spy has informed you?”
I. O. “If you mean the Tiger, he
has told me nothing!”
Miss P. “And may I also
ask something, What authority have you to
put me such a question? At the institution which
prided itself in teaching me an Africander
girl the manners and customs of the English,
they were emphatic upon the impertinence of asking
personal questions.”
I. O. “I must apologise,
Miss Pretorius. But the circumstances are hardly
normal. We cannot get away from the fact that
we are influenced against our better natures by an
unfortunate state of war.”
Miss P. (petulantly)
“Oh, the war! That is just like you Englishmen you
paragons of manly virtue you make the war
a cloak for all your sins. It is such an upright
war, therefore in its furtherance you can do no wrong cannot
even be unmannerly. It is this that has made
you so beloved in the Republics; but how does your
attitude hold good with me? I am a loyal British
subject, living at peace with all men in a British
colony. What right, therefore, have you to catechise
me as to my goings and comings? I do not even
live within the legitimate area of your so-called
just war. I am only exposed to its rigours that
is, as far as the insolence of those who should be
our defenders affects us women because
you English, in spite of your vaunted power and military
magnitude, cannot defend us, your Africander dependants,
from a few simple farmers. Where is your manhood,
where the courtly bearing of the Englishman, of which
I have heard so much and seen so little?”
I. O. “Really, Miss
Pretorius, if I may say so, I think that you exaggerate
the case. Unfortunately we are at war. You
claim consideration on the score of loyalty.
Are you astonished that I should have mistaken your
attitude towards us? Your two brothers only yesterday
were in arms against us. One is wounded, the other
a prisoner in our hands. Is it surprising that
I regarded you as their accomplice in rebellion?”
Miss P. “I am surprised
at nothing that an Englishman may do. But why
should I be compromised because my brothers have taken
up arms against you. Am I not of an age to formulate
opinions of my own? or is it that you consider that
we poor Africander girls have no intelligence, that
our opinions must of necessity be bound up in those
of our men-folk, that we have no mind above the duties
of the drudging hausfrau? No, sir; I am
an Africander loyalist more loyal by far
than the renegade white who brought you here.
And if you wish to know the reason of my presence
at Britstown, I am not averse to telling you, provided
you will not claim to have the information as a right.”
I. O. (with a touch
of penitence in his voice, which for a moment caused
a smile to flicker round the corners of the girl’s
mouth) “Of course, Miss Pretorius, I have
no right. You will persist in misunderstanding
me.”
Miss P. “It is a simple
problem. I am loyal, as I have said; but I am
a daughter and sister first, patriot later. In
a fit of meaningless bravado, tempered perhaps by
some compulsion from over the border, my old father
and brothers had joined a rebel commando. You,
with a naïveté which I had hardly expected in you,
and for which I liked you, told me the objective of
your column information which meant everything
to me, and perhaps to you, for you looked as if you
would have liked to have bitten your tongue out after
you had parted with it. I, with the honest intention
of saving my father and brothers from you, rode out
to them that night. I then knew nothing of Lotter’s
and Hertzog’s men. If it had not been for
the fighting, I should be now back again at Richmond
Road. As it is, my poor wounded father in the
next room is sufficient reason for my presence here.”
I. O. (who, English-like,
was all sympathy at once) “Oh, it was your
father then that you brought with you in the Cape cart.
I hope that he is not badly wounded. May I see
him?”
Miss P. “There would
be no object in your seeing him, as he is at present
asleep. No; he is, not severely wounded.
He is shot through the shoulder, luckily
it has missed his lung.”
I. O. (with unaffected
solicitude) “I am indeed sorry for you,
Miss Pretorius; those last forty-eight hours have been
full of trouble for you. But I doubt if you know
the worst!”
Miss P. (suddenly paling,
and losing for the moment her self-control) “The
worst! surely you have not burned our farm?
You are not burning farms in the Colony!”
I. O. “No, not your
farm; but I am afraid your sweetheart has been badly
hit!”
Miss P. (with evident relief
and surprise) “My sweetheart!”
I. O. “Yes; the
guide whom we took from your farm. He tried to
escape, and was unfortunately shot.”
Miss P. (laughing outright)
“Oh, Stephanus! He is no sweetheart of
mine. How could he be? He is only a bywoner!”
I. O. “But you told
me that he was when I first suggested taking him with
me!”
Miss P. “Did I?
It was not the truth, then; it was only an addition
to the part I was then playing.”
I. O. “How do I
know that you are not still playing a part?”
Miss P. “If I am, then
it is a very sad one. No; you may trust me now.
I have played my part, and if anything that I could
do for you would stop this dreadful war, I would gladly
help you!”
I. O. “You can help
me, if you will; but after what you have said about
my want of manners, I am afraid to ask you a question.”
Miss P. “I have forgiven
you that; and now that you do not claim the right
to question me, I do not mind answering you if I can!”
I. O. “How, if your
object was to save your father, did it happen that
Lotter was informed of our presence at Richmond Road?”
Miss P. “I expected that
you would ask that. I did not tell him personally,
nor would I in any circumstances have done so.
But the fact that I arrived in great haste in the
small hours of the morning had a peculiar meaning
to the commando, and it was not necessary for me to
open my mouth. I daresay to-night there will be
one hundred Africander girls in the saddle in different
parts of the Colony. When the urgency is great,
a girl is more reliable than a Kaffir. It is one
of our means of communication. There; is not that
an admission worthy of a loyal Africander?”
I. O. (holding out
his hand) “Good-bye, Miss Pretorius.”
It would have been difficult to analyse
the Intelligence officer’s feelings as he strode
back along the Britstown main street to keep his appointment
with his brigadier. He was at a loss to understand
two things, the anomalism of his second
meeting with the Pretorius girl, and the latter’s
attitude towards the Tiger. He could not divest
himself of a feeling of suspicion that all was not
quite as it appeared. There is no walk in life
which breeds distrust in one’s fellows so rapidly
as that of military Intelligence. And although
the Intelligence officer had only formed an atom in
this great structure of British incompetency in South
Africa for two days, yet sufficient had been borne
in upon him during this period to cause him uneasiness
as to the sincerity of motive in those that moved round
him. It is said that the only person that a race-horse
trainer will trust is his wife, and that as long as
he trusts her he remains an unsuccessful man.
We cannot say what truth there may be in this ancient
turf adage; but we do know that administrative work
successfully performed in the Intelligence Department
of an army in the field leads a man to place the lowest
estimate upon the integrity of his fellows. The
first lesson is of an inverse nature, and compels
a man, however he may dislike the procedure, to believe
those who move about him to be knaves, until he has
had opportunity to test their honesty. Young in
his knowledge of the people against whom he had been
warring for eighteen months, the Intelligence officer
was exceedingly puzzled at the strange anomaly presented
by the Africander girl he had just left. He could
not help feeling that this daughter of a nation which
he had led himself, if not to despise, at least to
depreciate, had fathomed him in two short interviews,
while he had penetrated little beyond the surface
of her feminine attractions and lively wit. He
was puzzled at the outcome of his interview, even
perhaps a little alarmed at the manner in which he
had been treated shocked at the erroneous
estimate which he had formed of Dutch women after
eighteen months in their midst. But this rebuff
had served its purpose: it had sown in him the
seeds of that appreciation of our enemy which will
have to generally exist if we are ultimately to live
in peace and concord, united as fellow-subjects, with
the people of South Africa.
It was now already dark, and the Intelligence
officer had some little difficulty in finding the
house in which the general had taken up his headquarters.
The main street was still full of revellers, bursting
with Colonial bonhomie, but strangely lacking
in topographical information. In fact it seemed
doubtful if the general’s house would ever be
found, and the weary Intelligence officer was rapidly
losing his temper, when chance again came to his aid.
A horseman came galloping down the street. A
little man in civilian attire all slouch-hat
and gaiter. He seemed to be in a desperate hurry,
as he was flogging his tired and mud-bespattered animal
unmercifully with his sjambok. It was
a beaten horse; and just as it came level with the
Intelligence officer, it stumbled, half recovered itself,
and then fell heavily in a woeful heap. The Intelligence
officer pulled the little civilian on to his feet,
with a soft admonition about the riding of beaten
horses. The civilian shook himself, and turned
to his prostrate horse with a curse. But the
poor beast had no intention of rising again.
It had lain down to die.
“It can’t be helped; the
news I bring will be worth a horse or two anyhow.
I must leave it, saddle and all, until I have seen
the general.”
“Do you know where to find him?”
hazarded the Intelligence officer. “I am
looking for his house now.”
Civilian. “Well, I ought
to; I’ve not run a store in this town for five
years not to know my way about. But who may you
be?”
Intelligence Officer. “I’m
staff officer to one of the columns which came in
to-day. I’ve been trying to find headquarters
this last ten minutes.”
Civ. “Come along with
me. I must get there at once. I’ve
just come in from Houwater. I was sent out by
the commandant to follow up Brand, and I have located
him and Hertzog. I tell you I have come in fast never
went faster in my life. Devilish nearly got cut
off. My word, I bore a charmed life to-day.
Well, here we are. I shall go straight in.
The new general doesn’t know me, but he soon
will. The commandant knows me: he knows
that when I come with news there is something worth
hearing.”
The little civilian bounced up the
steps and dived into the lighted hall of the headquarter’s
villa, before orderly or sentry could stop him.
A tall Yeoman stepped up to the Intelligence officer,
and saluting with more dignity than alacrity said,
“Beg your pardon, sir; but I am the general’s
orderly, and he told me to tell you that he would
only be a few minutes here, and that if you wouldn’t
mind waiting he would join you immediately.”
Waiting for a general is a serious
undertaking, and the Intelligence officer was tired.
Moreover, he did not know where the camp was, or when
he would be expected to take over from the chief staff
officer of the column. But on active service
all these things work out in their own time, so he
just sat down on the whitewashed steps of the verandah
and lit a cigarette. The tall Yeoman orderly did
likewise on the far side of the entrance. The
Intelligence officer smoked in silence for some time,
engaged in the occupation most welcomed by tired men
on service thinking of better times until
the nightmare of the column, the orders for the morrow,
the supplies and the camp, broke in upon his reverie.
Intelligence Officer. “Do you know where
the camp is?”
Orderly. “Yes, sir; it
is about half a mile from here.”
I. O. “You can find your way there
in the dark?”
Ord. “Yes, sir; it is
straight down the main street, and then the first
to the left. It would be impossible to miss it.”
I. O. “What do you belong to?”
Ord. “I don’t quite
know what I belong to now. I came out originally
with the 218th Company Imperial Yeomanry; but they
have gone back home.”
I. O. “Then what are you doing out
here now?”
Ord. “Well, you see,
sir, I came to the general as orderly about four months
ago, and I liked being with him so much that I did
not rejoin the company. As a matter of fact,
we were away down in Calvinia District; I don’t
quite see how I could have got back to them, even if
the general would have let me go. I haven’t
seen the company since I was wounded at Wittebergen
seven months ago. I joined the general from Deelfontein
Hospital!”
I. O. “I hope that
your billet has been kept open for you in England.”
Ord. “I sincerely trust
it has, sir; but I have missed a season’s hunting.
I don’t intend to miss another if I can help
it.”
I. O. “The devil you don’t.
What do you do at home?”
Ord. “I hunt four days
a-week in the winter, and in the ”
I. O. “I mean, what is your job?”
Ord. “I haven’t
much of a job, sir; I’m the junior partner in
an engineering firm, and as we do some very big things
in contracts, there isn’t much left for me to
do except amuse myself!”
I. O. “Then whatever made you come
out in the ranks?”
Ord. “It suits me, sir.
I am not fond of responsibility: besides, if
every one who could afford it had taken a commission
in our company, we should have been all officers,
with no one to command!”
I. O. “I call it most sporting of
you.”
Ord. “No; not exactly
sporting. It was no idea of sport that brought
me out here. It was a sense of duty. Were
you out here, sir, during the Black Week the
Colenso-Magersfontein period? You were. Then
you have not realised, and you never can realise,
what we in England went through during that period.
I went down to my stables one morning, and my groom
came up to me and asked if he might leave at once.
In answer to my look of surprise, he said, ’It’s
this way, sir: I feel that the time has come
when we shall want every man who can ride and shoot
to defend the country. I can do both, and the
country is not going to be defeated because I can
ride and shoot, and won’t. I want to join
the Yeomanry!’ I let him go, and thought over
his estimate of the situation all day. If the
country’s honour lay in my groom’s hands,
how much more must it lie in mine the employer
of labour? I made up my mind before dinner, told
my wife before going to bed, and here I am, sir.”
Nor was this an extraordinary case.
There must have been in South Africa during the second
phase of the war many hundreds of men one
might almost say thousands actuated by the
same spirit, impelled by the same feeling, as this
rich contractor and his groom. Men who felt that
the nation had desperate need of their services; men
who voluntarily undertook the risks and perils of
a soldier’s life, not from any hope of preferment,
not from love of adventure or mercenary advancement,
but from true patriotism a sacrifice to
meet the nation’s call in the hour of her need.
But that day soon passed. The tide turned, and
clash of arms ceased upon our own frontiers and within
our own dependencies, and the din of war sounded faintly
from the heart of the enemy’s country.
Then true patriotism failed; the men who had gone
forth with their country’s acclamations
returned as their obligations expired. There
were no patriots of the same class found to take their
places. Yet the exigencies of the struggle required
even more men than had been in the field when Lord
Roberts made his extreme effort to retrieve the earlier
misfortunes. Then it was that we committed another
of those many errors in judgment which have marked
the conduct of the campaign. We believed that
in December 1900 the edifice of the Boer resistance
was crumbling to its foundations, that
it was like a mighty smoke-stack, already mined at
its base, and but requiring fuel at the dummy supports
to bring the whole structure in ruins to the ground.
We called for the fuel. The cry went forth for
men men men. Any men; only
let there be a sufficient quantity. The war was
over. Had not the highest officials said that
it was over. The recruiting-sergeant went out
into the highways and hedges to collect the fuel for
Lord Kitchener’s final operation. It mattered
not the quality it was only quantity.
The war was over. The gates of the Gold Reef
City would again be open. Then the mass of degraded
manhood which had fled from Johannesburg at the first
muttering of thunder in the war-cloud flocked from
their hiding-places on the Cape Colony seaboard and
fell upon the recruiting-sergeant’s neck.
Mean whites that they were, they came out of their
burrows at the first gleam of sunshine. Greek,
Armenian, Russian, Scandinavian, Levantine, Pole, and
Jew. Jail-bird, pickpocket, thief, drunkard,
and loafer, they presented themselves to the recruiting-sergeant,
and in due course polluted the uniform which they
were not fit to salute from a distance. The war
was over; there would be no more fighting, only a quick
march to Johannesburg, and disbandment within reach
of the filthy lucre which they coveted. And so
new corps were raised, with spirit-stirring titles,
while old, honoured, and existing regiments were sullied
beyond recognition by association with the refuse and
sweepings from the least manly community in the universe.
Such fuel could not even clear the dummy supports
at the base of the Boer resistance. It refused
to burn. It could never have burned in any circumstances.
These men had no intention of fighting. Their
appearance in the field gave new life to the enemy.
New confidence, and free gifts of rifles, ammunition,
clothes, and horses. Men could not be found to
command them, for to place confidence in their powers
meant professional disgrace. These men had not
come to fight. They had enlisted only to reach
Johannesburg, and they refused to fight. Surrender
to them brought no qualm or disgrace. They possessed
no faculty sensible to shame. Then the enemy
hardened his heart. And who can blame him?
He had ever been told that the supply of British fighting
material was limited. He found these creatures
in the field against him. He stepped up to them,
and disarmed them without an effort. Then he said,
we have exhausted their supply of real fighting men.
They are now forced to place this spurious article
in the field. We will persevere just a little
longer. If we persevere till disease shall further
destroy their good men, we must win in the long-run.
The error in judgment which allowed of the enlistment
of these men has perhaps done more than anything else
to prolong the war. If any doubts remain, let
the curious call upon the Government for a return
of arms and ammunition surrendered to and captured
by the enemy between November 1900 and November 1901,
and then, if the answer be justly given, judge of the
necessity of arsenals for our enemy.
The brigadier had finished his interview
with his superior, and the clink of glasses had shown
that the general had not sent him off without a stirrup-cup.
He came out upon the verandah, and called for his
orderly.
Brigadier. “Hullo, Mr
Intelligence; I thought you were lost. Come along
here out into the road. I want to speak to you,
but we must be careful not to be overheard; this place
simply teems with rebels. (They advanced into the
broadway, the orderly following at a respectful distance.)
Now, look here, we are to have a big fight to-morrow.
You saw that funny little beggar in the hat. Well,
he wasn’t playing at robbers, though you would
never have known it. He was really bringing the
good news to Ghent killing horses all the
way. He’s a local Burnham, and passing good,
according to the commandant. Well, he’s
located Brand, Pretorius, and our old friend Hedgehog
at Houwater, and we are going out to give battle.
More, they believe that De Wet has doubled back towards
Strydenburg, and is trying to link up with these Houwater
gentry, as the latter have collected horses for him.
Now, our bushranging robber reports that Brand has
an outpost of thirty men at a farm on the Ongers River,
twelve miles from here, covering the Houwater-Britstown
Road. We are to take a surprise party out to-night
and round them up. If we succeed, we will run
a very good chance of bringing off quite ‘a show’
to-morrow. So we must get along now, and get out
the invitations for the tea-party. The ‘Robber’
is to meet us here in two hours, and the old man has
lent me fifteen of Rimington’s Tigers, who are
‘fizzers’ for this sort of shikar.”
It would be an artist, indeed, who
could analyse and adequately describe the feelings
of a man parading for his first night-attack.
The magnitude or insignificance of the enterprise is
immaterial. The feelings of the young soldiers
from the New Cavalry Brigade as they paraded with
the hard-bitten swashbucklers, Rimington’s Tigers,
were identical with those of the army advancing across
the desert to the assault at Tel-el-Kebir; of Wauchope’s
Highland Brigade blundering to disaster in the slush
and bushes before Magersfontein; and Hunter Weston’s
handful of mounted sappers, who so boldly penetrated
into the heart of the enemy’s line to destroy
the railway north of Bloemfontein. A night-attack
must of necessity always be a delicate operation.
Shrouded in the mystery of darkness, men know that
their safety and the success of the enterprise is
dependent upon the sagacity and coolness of one or,
at the most, two men. They must be momentarily
prepared to meet the unexpected. The smallest
failure or miscarriage the merest chance may
lead to irretrievable disaster. Men who can face
death without flinching in the light of day often
quail at the thought of it in the darkness. The
mental tension is such that once men have been overwhelmed
during a night attack, like the beaten ram of the
arena, it must be weeks, even months, before they
can be trusted to face a similar situation. No
man who has ever taken part in night operations will
forget his first sensations. The recurring misgivings
bred of intense excitement. The misty hallucinations,
outcome of abnormal tension. The awful stillness
of the night. The muffled sounds of moving men,
exaggerated by the painful silence of the surroundings.
You long with a yearning which can only
be felt, not described that something may
happen to break the overpowering monotony of this
prelude to success or disaster. Some outlet to
your pent-up feelings. If only some one would
shout, or the enemy surprise you, or thank
God! relief has come, it has begun to rain!
As the little column of adventurers
from the New Cavalry Brigade trudged on in ghostly
silence, great drops of icy rain began to fall harbingers
of a coming storm. A shudder of satisfaction passed
through the ranks, from the “Robber” leading
the forlorn-hope, with the Intelligence officer and
the leader of the Tigers beside him, to little Meadows
and his troop of the 20th Dragoons in rear. Then,
preceded by a brief ten minutes of inky darkness, the
storm broke. It does not rain in South Africa water
is voided from above in solid sheets. A wall
of beating rain pours down, obliterating the landscape
by day, intensifying the darkness by night. The
column came to a halt; the horses, unable to face
the downpour, in spite of bridle, bit, and spur, swing
round their tails to meet it. And before a collar
can be turned or a coat adjusted every man in the
column is drenched to the skin. For ten minutes
perhaps the deluge lasts, then fades away as rapidly
as it came. And as one by one the misty features
of veldt reappear, you can hear the passing rainstorm
receding from you, still churning the veldt surface
into sticky pulp. The officers re-form the column,
and the journey is continued. But though the respite
has been short, it has been valuable; local inconvenience
acts as a sedative to the nerves. Besides, there
is less silence. The track that was parched and
spongy has now become soft and slippery. Horses
flounder and slide. Wet mackintoshes swish against
the animals’ flanks, and hoofs are raised with
a rinsing, sucking sound. But there is man’s
work afoot. As the rain-mists sufficiently clear,
the “Robber” is able to take his bearings.
The head of the column has now reached the foot of
a long low-lying ridge. The end cannot be seen;
but the “Robber” explains that the farm
where the Boers should be lies in a small cup at the
foot of the farther end of this ridge. The column
has already reached the place where it will be advisable
to leave the horses. If they are taken farther
along, the Boer picket, which is probably stationed
on the ridge, may be disturbed. Now, even if a
horse should neigh, it would be mistaken for one of
the many brood-mares belonging to the farm. The
march has been admirably timed; it still wants two
hours to daybreak. It will take fully half this
time to work along the ridge, overpower the picket
if there is one, and surround the farm.
“Dismount Number
threes take over the horses.” The word is
passed from man to man in whispers. There is
some little noise. Exaggerated by the situation,
it sounds a babel. Can any enemy within a mile
have failed to hear it? A rifle-butt hits against
a stone. A horse, either pulled by the bit or
terrified at some night-horror, backs and plunges,
and disturbs the whole section. A smothered curse,
as in the melee some man’s foot is trampled.
Surely such a noise would wake the dead! No;
the men fall in at the foot of the hill. They
are told to lie down and wait. The horror of
that waiting! There is a sound on the side of
the hill. A boulder has been shifted. The
men clutch their rifles, the click of a pistol cocking
is clearly audible. Then a form looms up.
The “Robber” signals silence. The
figure is approaching. It is only the Kaffir
scout, who had been sent on in advance to locate,
if possible, the picket. He comes up and hangs
his head upon his hand. He has found the picket,
and this is his way of demonstrating that the two
Boers comprising it are asleep.
Harvey of Rimington’s takes
command. He issues his orders, first to his own
men, then to the whole. They are simple:
“Fix bayonets. I will take the Kaffir with
me. When I hold up both my hands, the left section
of fours will follow me. You know what to do;
mind, not a shot is to be fired. The force will
advance up the hill extended to two paces, and halt
as soon as it reaches the summit. If we are discovered
by more than the picket, Rimington’s will rally
on me, the 20th on their own officer. Remember,
your line of retreat must be to the horses.”
Then the advance began. Slowly
the men toiled up. It seemed impossible to make
the ascent in silence. Men must trip in darkness
over rough ground tripping men with rifles
in their hands make what appears to be a fearful clatter.
By hypothesis it would seem impossible to surprise
even a sleeping picket. But you have only to be
on picket duty once to realise how full the night
is of deceptive noises. In reality the advance
was made with praiseworthy silence. Just as the
top was reached, the Kaffir plucked Harvey’s
arm. His veldt-bred eyes could see that which
was still obscured from the white man. “Near,
near!” he whispered in the captain’s ear.
Harvey raised both his hands above his head.
Silently, but with the agility of cats, the four lean
Colonials followed him. Six paces on, and under
the shelter of a rock appear the forms of two men,
asleep, and rolled in their blankets. It is not
necessary to describe what followed. A leap forward
by four lithe figures with shortened arms, a sinuous
flash of steel, a sickening thud and gurgle, one choking
wail, and all was over, and two farmer-soldiers had
paid the extreme penalty for the betrayal of the trust
their comrades had placed in them!
Five minutes for breathing-space.
Then the little line was reformed diagonally along
the table-top of the ridge. Half the game had
been won. It now remained to complete the coup.
If the unexpected did not happen, there was no reason
why the farmhouse should not be surrounded by daybreak.
But in war it is the unexpected which does happen.
Slowly the thirty men worked along the plateau towards
the point of the ridge. Two-thirds had been traversed,
when suddenly two figures appeared against the eastern
sky.
“Reliefs for the picket, d n!”
muttered the Rimington captain, and as the truth flashed
upon him came the challenge in Dutch
“Wie dar?”
“Follow me, Rimington’s!”
and the nearest men joined their captain in a dash
to reach the men. But it was too late. Up
came the Mausers. Two wild shots, and the
relief had turned and was rushing down the hill towards
the farm. If it had been day, all might have yet
been saved by pace. But in night operations you
cannot take these risks, especially when only one
man in the force knows the exact position of the objective.
Harvey rallied his men on the ridge, and even before
he could place them in position, Mausers
were popping from below, disclosing the kraals
and outhouses of the farm.
“We must stop up here till daybreak.
They will be gone before that. Well, there will
be no surprise of Hertzog at Houwater to-day, all
through a turn of rank bad luck!” and the Rimington
captain commenced to fill his pipe, for his long abstinence
from tobacco-smoke by reason of the night-march had
been his particular grievance since the column had
left Britstown.