Tween Snow and Fire.
by Bertram Mitford.
CHAPTER ONE.
THE EPISODE OF THE WHITE DOG.
The buck is running for dear life.
The dog is some fifty yards behind the buck. The Kafir is about the same distance behind the dog, which distance he is striving right manfully to maintain; not so unsuccessfully, either, considering that he is pitting the speed of two legs against that of eight.
Down the long gra.s.s slope they course--buck, dog, and savage. The former, a game little antelope of the steinbok species, takes the ground in a series of long, flying leaps, his white tail whisking like a flag of defiance. The second, a tawny, black-muzzled grey-hound, stretching his snaky length in the wake of his quarry, utters no sound, as with arrow-like velocity he holds on his course, his cruel eyes gleaming, his jaws dripping saliva in pleasurable antic.i.p.ation of the coming feast.
The third, a fine, well-knit young Kafir, his naked body glistening from head to foot with red ochre, urges on his hound with an occasional shrill whoop of encouragement, as he covers the ground at a surprising pace in his free, bounding stride. He holds a k.n.o.b-kerrie in his hand, ready for use as soon as the quarry shall be within hurling distance.
But of this there seems small chance at present. It takes a good dog indeed to run down an unwounded buck with the open _veldt_ before him, and good as this one is, it seems probable that he will get left. Down the long gra.s.s slope they course, but the opposite acclivity is the quarry"s opportunity. The pointed hoofs seem hardly to touch ground in the arrowy flight of their owner. The distance between the latter and the pursuing hound increases.
Along a high ridge overlooking this primitive chase grow, at regular intervals, several circular clumps of bush. One of these conceals a spectator. The latter is seated on horseback in the very midst of the scrub, his feet dangling loosely in the stirrups, his hand closed tightly and rather suggestively round the breech of a double gun--rifle and smooth bore--which rests across the pommel of his saddle. There is a frown upon his face, as, himself completely hidden, he watches intently the progress of the sport. It is evident that he is more interested than pleased.
For Tom Carhayes is the owner of this Kaffrarian stock run. In that part of Kaffraria, game is exceedingly scarce, owing to the presence of a redundant native population. Tom Carhayes is an ardent sportsman and spares no effort to protect and restore the game upon his farm. Yet here is a Kafir running down a buck under his very nose. Small wonder that he feels furious.
"That scoundrel Goniwe!" he mutters between his set teeth. "I"ll put a bullet through his cur, and lick the n.i.g.g.e.r himself within an inch of his life!"
The offence is an aggravated one. Not only is the act of poaching a very capital crime in his eyes, but the perpetrator ought to be at that moment at least three miles away, herding about eleven hundred of his master"s sheep. These he has left to take care of themselves while he indulges in an illicit buck-hunt. Small wonder indeed that his said master, at no time a good-tempered man, vows to make a condign example of him.
The buck has nearly gained the crest of the ridge. Once over it his chances are good. The pursuing hound, running more by sight than by scent, may easily be foiled, by a sudden turn to right or left, and a double or two. The dog is a long way behind now, and the spectator has to rise in his stirrups to command a view of the situation. Fifty yards more and the quarry will be over the ridge and in comparative safety.
But from just that distance above there suddenly darts forth another dog--a white one. It has sprung from a patch of bush similar to that which conceals the spectator. The buck, thoroughly demoralised by the advent of this new enemy, executes a rapid double, and thus pressed back into the very jaws of its first pursuer has no alternative but to head up the valley as fast as its legs can carry it.
But the new hound is fresh, and in fact a better dog than the first one.
He presses the quarry very close and needs not the encouraging shouts of his master, who has leaped forth from his concealment immediately upon unleashing him. For a few moments the pace is even, _then it decreases_. The buck seemed doomed.
And, indeed, such is the case anyhow. For, held in waiting at a given point, ready to be let slip if necessary, is a third dog. Such is the Kafir method of hunting. The best dog ever whelped is not quite equal, either in speed or staying power, to running down a full-grown buck in the open _veldt_, but by adopting the above means of hunting in relays, the chance are equalised. To be more accurate, the quarry has no chance at all.
On speeds the chase; the new dog, a tall white grey-hound of surprising endurance and speed, gaining rapidly; the other, lashed into a final spurt by the spirit of emulation, not far behind. The two Kafirs, stimulating their hounds with yells of encouragement, are straining every nerve to be in at the death.
The buck--terror and demoralisation in its soft, l.u.s.trous eyes--is heading straight for the spectator"s hiding place. The latter raises his piece, with the intention of sending a bullet through the first dog as soon as it shall come abreast of his position; the shot barrel will finish off the other.
But he does not fire. The fact is, the man is simply shaking with rage.
Grinding his teeth, he recognises his utter inability to hit a haystack at that moment, let alone a swiftly coursing grey-hound.
The chase sweeps by within seventy yards of his position--buck, dog, and Kafirs. Then another diversion occurs.
Two more natives rise, apparently out of the ground itself. One of these, poising himself erect with a peculiar springy, quivering motion, holds his kerrie ready to hurl. The buck is barely thirty yards distant, and going like the wind.
"Whigge--woof!" The hard stick hurls through the air--aimed nearly as far ahead of the quarry as the latter is distant from the marksman.
There is a splintering crash, and a shrill, horrid scream--then a reddish brown shape, writhing and rolling in agony upon the ground. The aim of the savage has been true. All four of the buck"s legs are snapped and shattered like pipe-stems.
The two hounds hurl themselves upon the struggling carcase, their savage snarls mingling with the sickening, half-human yell emitted by the terrified and tortured steinbok. The four Kafirs gather round their prey.
"_Suka inja_!" ["Get out, dog!"] cries one of them brutally, giving the white dog a dig in the ribs with the b.u.t.t-end of his kerrie, and putting the wretched buck out of its agony by a blow on the head with the same.
The hound, with a snarling yelp, springs away from the carcase, and lies down beside his fellow. Their flanks are heaving and panting after the run, and their lolling tongues and glaring eyes turn hungrily toward the expected prey. Their savage masters, squatted around, are resting after their exertions, chatting in a deep ba.s.s hum. To the concealed spectator the sight is simply maddening. He judges the time for swooping down upon the delinquents has arrived.
Were he wise he would elect to leave them alone entirely, and would withdraw quietly without betraying his presence. He might indeed derive some modic.u.m of satisfaction by subsequently sjambokking the defaulting Goniwe for deserting his post, though the wisdom of that act of consolation may be doubted. But a thoroughly angry man is seldom wise, and Tom Carhayes forms no exception to the general rule. With a savage curse he breaks from his cover and rides furiously down upon the offending group.
But if he imagines his unlooked for arrival is going to strike terror to the hearts of those daring and impudent poachers, he soon becomes alive to his mistake. Two of them, including his own herd, are already standing. The others make no attempt to rise from their careless and squatting posture. All contemplate him with absolute unconcern, and the half-concealed and contemptuous grin spread across the broad countenance of his retainer in no wise tends to allay his fury.
"What the devil are you doing here, Goniwe?" he cries. "Get away back to your flock at once, or I"ll tan your hide to ribbons. Here. Get out of the light you two--I"m going to shoot that dog--unless you want the charge through yourselves instead."
This speech, delivered half in Boer Dutch, half in the Xosa language, has a startling effect. The other two Kafirs spring suddenly to their feet, and all four close up in a line in front of the speaker, so as to stand between him and their dogs. Their demeanour is insolent and threatening to the last degree.
"_Whau "mlungu_!" ["Ho! white man!"] cries the man whose successful throw has brought down the quarry--a barbarian of herculean stature and with an evil, sinister cast of countenance. "Shoot away, _"mlungu_!
But it will not be only a dog that will die."
The purport of this menace is unmistakable. The speaker even advances a step, shifting, as he does so, his a.s.segais from his right hand to his left--leaving the former free to wield an ugly looking kerrie. His fellow-countrymen seem equally ready for action.
Carhayes is beside himself with fury. To be defied and bearded like this on his own land, and by four black scoundrels whom he has caught red-handed in the act of killing his own game! The position is intolerable. But through his well-nigh uncontrollable wrath there runs a vein of caution.
Were he to act upon his first impulse and shoot the offending hound, he would have but one charge left. The Kafirs would be upon him before he could draw trigger. They evidently mean mischief, and they are four to one. Two of them are armed with a.s.segais and all four carry--in their hands the scarcely less formidable weapon--the ordinary hard-wood kerrie. Moreover, were he to come off victorious at the price of shooting one of them dead, the act would entail very ugly consequences, for although the frontier was practically in little short of a state of war, it was not actually so, which meant that the civil law still held sway and would certainly claim its vindication to the full.
For a moment or two the opposing parties stand confronting each other.
The white man, seated on his horse, grips the breech of his gun convulsively, and the veins stand out in cords upon his flushed face as he realises his utter powerlessness. The Kafirs, their naked, muscular frames repulsive with red ochre, stand motionless, their savage countenances wreathed in a sneer of hate and defiance. There are scarcely ten yards between them.
The train is laid. It only needs the application of a spark to cause a magnificent flare-up. That spark is applied by the tall barbarian who has first spoken.
"_Au umlungu_!" he cries in his great, sneering tones. "Go away. We have talked enough with you. Am I not Hlangani, a man of the House of Sarili, the Great Chief, and is not the white dog mine? Go away.
_Suka_!" ["Get out." Usually only employed toward a dog.]
Now whether through pure accident--in other words, the "sheer cussedness" of Fate--or whether it imagines that its master"s last word was a command to itself, the white dog at this juncture gets up, and leaving the protecting shadow of its master begins to slink away over the _veldt_. This and the swaggering insolence of the Kafir is too much for Carhayes. Up goes his piece: there is a flash and a report. The wretched hound sinks in his tracks without even a yelp, and lies feebly kicking his life away, with the blood welling from a great circular wound behind the shoulder. The poor beast has run down his last buck.
[Commonly known as Kreli--the paramount chief of all the Xosa tribes.]
The train is fired. Like the crouching leopard crawling nearer for a surer spring the great Kafir, with a sudden glide, advances to the horse"s head, and makes a quick clutch at the bridle. Had he succeeded in seizing it, a rapidly followed up blow from the deadly kerrie would have stretched the rider senseless, if not dead, upon the _veldt_. But the latter is too quick for him. Jerking back his horse"s head and driving in both spurs, he causes the animal to rear and plunge, thus defeating any attempt on the part of his enemies to drag him from the saddle, as well as widening the distance between himself and them.
"Stand back, you curs!" he roars, dropping his piece to a level with the chest of the foremost. "The first who moves another step shall be served the same as that brute of a dog!"
But the Kafirs only laugh derisively. They are shrewd enough to know that the civil law is still paramount, and imagine he dare not fire on them. A kerrie hurtles through the air with an ugly "whigge." Blind with fury, Carhayes discharges his remaining barrel full at the tall savage, who is still advancing towards him, and whose threatening demeanour and formidable aspect seems to warrant even that extreme step in self-defence. The Kafir falls.
Surprised, half cowed by this unlooked for contingency, the others pause irresolute. Before they can recover themselves a warning shout, close at hand, creates a diversion which seems likely to throw a new light on the face of affairs.
CHAPTER TWO.
"YOU HAVE STRUCK A CHIEF."
"_Baleka_ [Run], you dogs!" cried Carhayes, who had taken the opportunity of slipping a couple of fresh cartridges into his gun.
"_Baleka_, or I"ll shoot the lot of you."
He looked as if he meant it, too. The Kafirs, deeming discretion the better part of valour, judged it expedient to temporise.