<h2><SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV.<br/> JOHN TO THE RESCUE</h2>
<p>The important domestic events described in the last chapter took place on
December 7, 1880, and for the next twelve days or so everything went as happily
at Mooifontein as things should go under the circumstances. Every day Silas
Croft beamed with an enlarged geniality in his satisfaction at the turn that
matters had taken, and every day John found cause to congratulate himself more
and more on the issue of his bold venture towards matrimony. Now that he came
to be on such intimate terms with his betrothed, he perceived a hundred charms
and graces in her nature which before he had never suspected. Bessie was like a
flower: the more she basked in the light and warmth of her love the more her
character opened and unfolded, shedding perfumed sweetness around her and
revealing unguessed charms. It is so with all women, and more especially with a
woman of her stamp, whom Nature has made to love and be loved as maid and wife
and mother. Her undoubted personal beauty shared also in this development, her
fair face taking a richer hue and her eyes an added depth and meaning. She was
in every respect, save one, all that a man could desire in his wife, and even
the exception would have stood to her credit with many men. It was this: she
was not an intellectual person, although certainly she possessed more than the
ordinary share of intelligence and work-a-day common sense. Now John was a
decidedly intellectual man, and, what is more, he highly appreciated that rare
quality in the other sex. But, after all, when one is just engaged to a sweet
and lovely woman, one does not think much about her intellect. Those
reflections come afterwards.</p>
<p>And so they sauntered hand in hand through the sunny days and were happy
exceedingly. Least of all did they allow the rumours which reached them from
the great Boer gathering at Paarde Kraal to disturb their serenity. There had
been so many of these reports of rebellion that folk were beginning to regard
them as a chronic state of affairs.</p>
<p>“Oh, the Boers!” said Bessie, with a pretty toss of her golden
head, as they were sitting one morning on the verandah. “I am sick to
death of hearing about the Boers and all their got-up talk. I know what it is;
it is just an excuse for them to go away from their farms and wives and
children and idle about at these great meetings, and drink
‘square-face’ with their mouths full of big words. You see what
Jess says in her last letter. People in Pretoria believe that it is all
nonsense from beginning to end, and I think they are perfectly right.”</p>
<p>“By the way, Bessie,” asked John, “have you written to Jess
telling her of our engagement?”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, I wrote some days ago, but the letter only went yesterday. She
will be pleased to hear about it. Dear old Jess, I wonder when she means to
come home again. She has been away long enough.”</p>
<p>John made no answer, but went on smoking his pipe in silence, wondering if Jess
would be pleased. He did not understand her yet. She had gone away just as he
was beginning to understand her.</p>
<p>Presently he observed Jantje sneaking about between the orange-trees as though
he wished to call attention to himself. Had he not wanted to do so he would
have moved from one to the other in such a way that nobody could have seen him.
His partial and desultory appearances indicated that he was on view.</p>
<p>“Come out of those trees, you little rascal, and stop slipping about like
a snake in a stone wall!” shouted John. “What is it you
want—wages?”</p>
<p>Thus adjured, Jantje advanced and sat down on the path, as usual in the full
glare of the sun.</p>
<p>“No, Baas,” he said, “it is not wages. They are not due
yet.”</p>
<p>“What is it, then?”</p>
<p>“No, Baas, it is this. The Boers have declared war on the English
Government, and they have eaten up the <i>rooibaatjes</i> at Bronker’s
Spruit, near Middleburg. Joubert shot them all there the day before
yesterday.”</p>
<p>“What!” shouted John, letting his pipe fall in his astonishment.
“Stop, though, that must be a lie. You say near Middleburg, the day
before yesterday: that would be December 20. When did you hear this?”</p>
<p>“At daybreak, Baas. A Basutu told me.”</p>
<p>“Then there is an end of it. The news could not have reached here in
thirty-eight hours. What do you mean by coming to me with such a tale?”</p>
<p>The Hottentot smiled. “It is quite true, Baas. Bad news flies like a
bird,” and he picked himself up and slipped off to his work.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding the apparent impossibility of the thing, John was considerably
disturbed, knowing the extraordinary speed with which tidings do travel among
Kafirs, more swiftly, indeed, than the fleetest mounted messenger can bear
them. Leaving Bessie, who was also somewhat alarmed, he went in search of Silas
Croft, and, finding him in the garden, told him what Jantje had said. The old
man did not know what to make of the tale, but, remembering Frank
Muller’s threats, he shook his head.</p>
<p>“If there is any truth in it, that villain Muller has a hand in
it,” he said. “I’ll go to the house and see Jantje. Give me
your arm, John.”</p>
<p>He obeyed, and, on arriving at the top of the steep path, they perceived the
stout figure of old Hans Coetzee, who had been John’s host at the
shooting-party, ambling along on his fat little pony.</p>
<p>“Ah,” said Silas, “here is the man who will tell us if there
is anything in it all.”</p>
<p>“Good-day, <i>Oom</i> Coetzee, good-day!” he shouted out in his
stentorian tones. “What news do you bring with you?”</p>
<p>The jolly-looking Boer rolled awkwardly off his pony before answering, and,
throwing the reins over its head, came to meet them.</p>
<p>“<i>Allemachter</i>, <i>Oom</i> Silas, it is bad news. You have heard of
the <i>bymakaar</i> at Paarde Kraal. Frank Muller wanted me to go, but I would
not, and now they have declared war on the British Government and sent a
proclamation to Lanyon. There will be fighting, <i>Oom</i> Silas, the land will
run with blood, and the poor <i>rooibaatjes</i> will be shot down like
buck.”</p>
<p>“The poor Boers, you mean,” growled John, who did not like to hear
her Majesty’s army talked of in terms of regretful pity.</p>
<p><i>Oom</i> Coetzee shook his head with the air of one who knew all about it,
and then turned an attentive ear to Silas Croft’s version of
Jantje’s story.</p>
<p>“<i>Allemachter!</i>” groaned Coetzee, “what did I tell you?
The poor <i>rooibaatjes</i> shot down like buck, and the land running with
blood! And now that Frank Muller will draw me into it, and I shall have to go
and shoot the poor <i>rooibaatjes</i>; and I can’t miss, try as hard as I
will, I <i>can’t</i> miss. And when we have shot them all I suppose that
Burgers will come back, and he is <i>kransick</i> (mad). Yes, yes; Lanyon is
bad, but Burgers is worse,” and the comfortable old gentleman groaned
aloud at the troubles in which he foresaw he would be involved, and finally
took his departure by a bridle-path over the mountain, saying that, as things
had turned out, he would not like it to be known that he had been calling on an
Englishman. “They might think that I was not loyal to the
‘land,’” he added in explanation; “the land which we
Boers bought with our blood, and which we shall win back with our blood,
whatever the poor ‘pack oxen’ of <i>rooibaatjes</i> try to do. Ah,
those poor, poor <i>rooibaatjes</i>, one Boer will drive away twenty of them
and make them run across the veldt, if they can run in those great knapsacks of
theirs, with the tin things hanging round them like the pots and kettles to the
bed-plank of a waggon. What says the Holy Book? ‘One thousand shall flee
at the rebuke of one, and at the rebuke of five shall ye flee,’ at least
I think that is it. The dear Lord knew what was coming when He wrote it. He was
thinking of the Boers and the poor <i>rooibaatjes</i>,” and Coetzee
departed, shaking his head sadly.</p>
<p>“I am glad that the old gentleman has made tracks,” said John,
“for if he had gone on much longer about the poor English soldiers he
would have fled ‘at the rebuke of one,’ I can tell him.”</p>
<p>“John,” said Silas Croft suddenly, “you must go up to
Pretoria and fetch Jess. Mark my words, the Boers will besiege Pretoria, and if
we don’t get her down at once she will be shut up there.”</p>
<p>“Oh no,” cried Bessie, in sudden alarm, “I cannot let John
go.”</p>
<p>“I am sorry to hear you talk like that, Bessie, when your sister is in
danger,” answered her uncle rather sternly; “but there, I dare say
that it is natural. I will go myself. Where is Jantje? I shall want the Cape
cart and the four grey horses.”</p>
<p>“No, uncle dear, John shall go. I was not thinking what I was saying. It
seemed—a little hard at first.”</p>
<p>“Of course I must go,” said John. “Don’t fret, dear, I
shall be back in five days. Those four horses can go sixty miles a day for that
time, and more. They are fat as butter, and there is lots of grass along the
road if I can’t get forage for them. Besides, the cart will be nearly
empty, so I can carry a muid of mealies and fifty bundles of forage. I will
take that Zulu boy, Mouti, with me. He does not know very much about horses,
but he is a plucky fellow, and would stick by one at a pinch. One can’t
rely on Jantje; he is always sneaking off somewhere, and would be sure to get
drunk just as one wanted him.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes, John, that’s right, that’s right,” said the
old man. “I will go and see about having the horses got up and the wheels
greased. Where is the castor-oil, Bessie? There is nothing like castor-oil for
these patent axles. You ought to be off in an hour. You had better sleep at
Luck’s to-night; you might get farther, but Luck’s is a good place
to stop, and they will look after you well there, and you can be off by three
in the morning, reaching Heidelberg by ten o’clock to-morrow night, and
Pretoria by the next afternoon,” and he bustled away to make the
necessary preparations.</p>
<p>“Oh, John,” said Bessie, beginning to cry, “I don’t
like your going at all among all those wild Boers. You are an English officer,
and if they find you out they will shoot you. You don’t know what brutes
some of them are when they think it safe to be so. Oh, John, John, I
can’t endure your going.”</p>
<p>“Cheer up, my dear,” said John, “and for Heaven’s sake
stop crying, for I cannot bear it. I must go. Your uncle would never forgive me
if I did not, and, what is more, I should never forgive myself. There is nobody
else to send, and we can’t leave Jess to be shut up there in
Pretoria—for months perhaps. As for the risk, of course there is a little
risk, but I must take it. I am not afraid of risks—at least I used not to
be, but you have made a bit of a coward of me, Bessie dear. There, give me a
kiss, old girl, and come and help me to pack my things. Please God I shall get
back all right, and Jess with me, in a week from now.”</p>
<p>Whereon Bessie, being a sensible and eminently practical young woman, dried her
tears, and with a cheerful face, albeit her heart was heavy enough, set to work
with a will to make every possible preparation.</p>
<p>The few clothes John was to take with him were packed in a Gladstone bag, the
box fitted underneath the movable seat in the Cape cart was filled with the
tinned provisions which are so much used in South Africa, and all the other
little arrangements, small in themselves, but of such infinite importance to
the traveller in a wild country, were duly attended to by her careful hands.
Then came a hurried meal, and before it was swallowed the cart was at the door,
with Jantje hanging as usual on to the heads of the two front horses, and the
stalwart Zulu, or rather Swazi boy, Mouti, whose sole luggage appeared to
consist of a bundle of assegais and sticks wrapped up in a grass mat, and who,
hot as it was, was enveloped in a vast military great-coat, lounging placidly
alongside.</p>
<p>“Good-bye, John, dear John,” said Bessie, kissing him again and
again, and striving to keep back the tears that, do what she could, would
gather in her blue eyes. “Good-bye, my love.”</p>
<p>“God bless you, dearest,” he said simply, kissing her in answer;
“good-bye, Mr. Croft. I hope to see you again in a week,” and he
was in the cart and had gathered up the long and intricate-looking reins.
Jantje let go the horses’ heads and uttered a whoop. Mouti, giving up
star-gazing, suddenly became an animated being and scrambled into the cart with
surprising alacrity; the horses sprang forward at a hand gallop, and were soon
hidden from Bessie’s dim sight in a cloud of dust. Poor Bessie, it was a
hard trial, and now that John had gone and her tears could not distress him,
she went into her room and gave way to them freely enough.</p>
<p>John reached Luck’s, a curious establishment on the Pretoria road, such
as are to be met with in sparsely populated countries, combining the
characteristics of an inn, a shop, and a farm-house. It was not an inn and not
a farm-house, strictly speaking, nor was it altogether a shop, although there
was a “store” attached. If the traveller is anxious to obtain
accommodation for man and beast at a place of this stamp he has to proceed
warily, so to say, lest he should be requested to move on. He must advance, hat
in hand, and ask to be taken in as a favour, as many a stiff-necked wanderer,
accustomed to the obsequious attentions of “mine host,” has learnt
to his cost. There is no such dreadful autocrat as your half-and-half innkeeper
in South Africa, and then he is so completely master of the situation.
“If you don’t like it, go and be d—d to you,” is his
simple answer to the remonstrances of the infuriated voyager. Then you must
either knock under and look as though you liked it, or trek on into the
“unhostelled” wilderness. But on this occasion John fared well
enough. To begin with, he knew the owners of the place, who were very civil
people if approached in a humble spirit, and, furthermore, he found everybody
in such a state of unpleasurable excitement that they were only too glad to get
another Englishman with whom to talk over matters. Not that their information
amounted to much, however. There was a rumour of the Bronker’s Spruit
disaster and other rumours of the investment of Pretoria, and of the advance of
large bodies of Boers to take possession of the pass over the Drakensberg,
known as Laing’s Nek, but there was no definite intelligence.</p>
<p>“You won’t get into Pretoria,” said one melancholy man,
“so it’s no use trying. The Boers will just catch you and kill you,
and there will be an end of it. You had better leave the girl to look after
herself and go back to Mooifontein.”</p>
<p>But this was not John’s view of the matter. “Well,” he
answered, “at any rate I’ll have a try.” Indeed, he had a
sort of bull-dog nature about him which led him to believe that if he made up
his mind to do a thing, he would do it somehow, unless he should be physically
incapacitated by circumstances beyond his own control. It is wonderful how far
a mood of the kind will take a man. Indeed, it is the widespread possession of
this sentiment that has made England what she is. Now it is beginning to die
down and to be legislated out of our national character, and the results are
already commencing to appear in the incipient decay of our power. We cannot
govern Ireland. It is beyond us; let Ireland have Home Rule! We cannot cope
with our Imperial responsibilities; let them be cast off: and so on. The
Englishmen of fifty years ago did not talk in this “weary Titan”
strain.</p>
<p>Well, every nation becomes emasculated sooner or later, that seems to be the
universal fate; and it appears that it is our lot to be emasculated, not by the
want of law but by a plethora thereof. This country was made, not by
Governments, but for the most part in despite of them by the independent
efforts of generations of individuals. The tendency nowadays is to merge the
individual in the Government, and to limit or even forcibly to destroy personal
enterprise and responsibility. Everything is to be legislated for or legislated
against. As yet the system is only in its bud. When it blooms, if it is ever
allowed to bloom, the Empire will lose touch of its constituent atoms and
become a vast soulless machine, which will first get out of order, then break
down, and, last of all, break up. We owe more to sturdy, determined,
unconvinceable Englishmen like John Niel than we know, or, perhaps, should be
willing to acknowledge in these enlightened days. “Long live the
Caucus!” that is the cry of the nineteenth century. But what will
Englishmen cry in the twentieth?[*]</p>
<p class="footnote">
[*] These words were written some ten years ago; but since then, with all
gratitude be it said, a change has come over the spirit of the nation, or
rather, the spirit of the nation has re-asserted itself. Though the
“Little England” party still lingers, it exists upon the edge of
its own grave. The dominance and responsibilities of our Empire are no longer a
question of party politics, and among the Radicals of to-day we find some of
the most ardent Imperialists. So may it ever be!—H. R. H. 1896.</p>
<p>John resumed his perilous journey more than an hour before dawn on the
following morning. Nobody was stirring, and as it was practically impossible to
arouse the slumbering Kafirs from the various holes and corners where they were
taking their rest—for a native hates the cold of the dawning—Mouti
and he were obliged to harness the horses and inspan them without
assistance—an awkward job in the dark. At last, however, everything was
ready, and, as the bill had been paid overnight, there was nothing to wait for,
so they clambered into the cart and made a start. But before they had proceeded
forty yards, however, John heard a voice calling to him to stop. He did so, and
presently, holding a lighted candle which burnt without a flicker in the still
damp air, and draped from head to foot in a dingy-looking blanket, appeared the
male Cassandra of the previous evening.</p>
<p>He advanced slowly and with dignity, as became a prophet, and at length reached
the side of the cart, where the sight of his illuminated figure and of the
dirty blanket over his head nearly made the horses run away.</p>
<p>“What is it?” said John testily, for he was in no mood for delay.</p>
<p>“I thought I’d just get up to tell you,” replied the draped
form, “that I am quite sure that I was right, and that the Boers will
shoot you. I should not like you to say afterwards that I have not warned
you,” and he held up the candle so that the light fell on John’s
face, and gazed at it in fond farewell.</p>
<p>“Curse it all,” said John in a fury, “if that was all you had
to say you might have kept in bed,” and he brought down his lash on the
wheelers and away they went with a bound, putting out the prophet’s
candle and nearly knocking the prophet himself backwards into the <i>sluit</i>.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />