<h2><SPAN name="chap16"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI.<br/> PRETORIA</h2>
<p>Jess was not very happy at Pretoria previous to the unexpected outbreak of
hostilities. Most people who have made a great moral effort, and after some
severe mental struggle have entered on the drear path from self-sacrifice,
experience the reaction that will follow as certainly as the night follows the
day. It is one thing to renounce the light, to stand in the full glow of the
setting beams of our imperial joy and chant out our farewell, and quite another
to live alone in the darkness. For a little while memory may support us, but
memory grows faint. On every side is the thick, cheerless pall and that
stillness through which no sound comes. We are alone, quite alone, cut off from
the fellowship of the day, unseeing and unseen. More especially is this so when
the dungeon is of our own making, and we ourselves have shot its bolts. There
is a natural night that comes to all, and in its unwavering course swallows
every mortal hope and fear, for ever and for ever. To this we can more easily
resign ourselves, for we recognise the universal lot and bow ourselves beneath
the all-effacing hand. The earth does not pine when the daylight passes from
its peaks; it only sleeps.</p>
<p>But Jess had buried herself and she knew it. There was no absolute need for her
to have sacrificed her affection to her sister’s: she had done so of her
own will, and at times not unnaturally she was regretful. Self-denial is a
stern-faced angel. If only we hold him fast and wrestle with him long enough he
will speak us soft words of happy sound, just as, if we wait long enough in the
darkness of the night, stars will come to share our loneliness. Still this is
one of those things that Time hides from us and only reveals at his own
pleasure; and, so far as Jess was concerned, his pleasure was not yet.
Outwardly, however, she showed no sign of her distress and of the passion which
was eating at her heart. She was pale and silent, it is true, but then she had
always been remarkable for her pallor and silence. Only she gave up her
singing.</p>
<p>So the weeks passed very drearily for the poor girl, who was doing what other
people did—eating and drinking, riding, and going to parties like the
rest of the Pretoria world, till at last she began to think that she had better
be returning home again, lest she should wear out her welcome. And yet she
dreaded to do so, mindful of her daily prayer to be delivered from temptation.
As to what was happening at Mooifontein she was in almost complete ignorance.
Bessie wrote to her, of course, and so did her uncle once or twice, but they
did not tell her much of what she wanted to know. Bessie’s letters were,
it is true, full of allusions to what Captain Niel was doing, but she did not
go beyond that. Her reticence, however, told her observant sister more than her
words. Why was she so reticent? No doubt because things still hung in the
balance. Then Jess would think of what it all meant for her, and now and again
give way to an outburst of passionate jealousy which would have been painful
enough to witness if anybody had been there to see it.</p>
<p>Thus the time went on towards Christmas, for Jess, having been warmly pressed
to do so, had settled to stay over Christmas and return to the farm with the
new year. There had been a great deal of talk in the town about the Boers, but
she was too much preoccupied with her own affairs to pay much attention to it.
Nor, indeed, was the public mind greatly moved; they were so much accustomed to
Boer scares at Pretoria, and hitherto these had invariably ended in smoke. But
all of a sudden, on the morning of the eighteenth of December, came the news of
the proclamation of the Republic. The town was thrown into a ferment, and there
arose a talk of going into laager, so that, anxious as she was to get away,
Jess could see no hope of returning to the farm till the excitement was over.
Then, a day or two later, Conductor Egerton came limping into Pretoria from the
scene of the disaster at Bronker’s Spruit, with the colours of the 94th
Regiment tied round his middle, and such a tale to tell that the blood went to
her heart and seemed to stagnate there as she listened.</p>
<p>After that there was confusion worse confounded. Martial law having been
proclaimed, the town, which was large, straggling, and incapable of defence,
was abandoned, the inhabitants being ordered into laager on the high ground
overlooking the city. There they were, young and old, sick and well, delicate
women and little children, all crowded together in the open under the cover of
the fort, with nothing but canvas tents, waggons, and sheds to shelter them
from the fierce summer suns and rains. Jess shared a waggon with her friend and
her friend’s sister and mother, and found it rather a tight fit even to
lie down. Sleep with all the noises of the camp going on round her was almost
impossible.</p>
<p>It was about three o’clock on the day following that first miserable
night in the laager when, by the last mail that passed into Pretoria, she
received Bessie’s letter, announcing her engagement to John. She took her
letter and went some way from the camp to the side of Signal Hill, where she
was not likely to be disturbed, and, finding a nook shaded by mimosa-trees, sat
down and broke the envelope. Before she had reached the foot of the first page
she saw what was coming and set her teeth. Then she read the long epistle
through from beginning to end without flinching, though the words of affection
seemed to burn her. So it had come at last. Well, she expected it, and had
plotted to bring it about, so really there was no reason in the world why she
should feel disappointed. On the contrary, she ought to rejoice, and for a
little while she really did rejoice in her sister’s happiness. It made
her glad to think that Bessie, whom she so dearly loved, was happy.</p>
<p>And yet she felt angry with John with that sort of anger which we feel against
those who have blindly injured us. Why should it be in his power to hurt her so
cruelly? Still she hoped that he would be happy with Bessie, and then she hoped
that these wretched Boers would take Pretoria, and that she would be shot or
otherwise put out of the way. She had no heart for life; all the colour had
faded from her sky. What was she to do with her future? Marry somebody and busy
herself with rearing a pack of children? It would be a physical impossibility
to her. No, she would go away to Europe and mix in the great stream of life and
struggle with it, and see if she could win a place for herself among the people
of her day. She had it in her, she knew that; and now that she had put herself
out of the reach of passion she would be more likely to succeed, for success is
to the impassive, who are also the strong. She would not stop on the farm after
John and Bessie were married; she was quite determined as to that; nor, if she
could avoid it, would she return there before they were married. She would see
him no more, no more! Alas, that she had ever seen him.</p>
<p>Feeling somewhat happier, or at any rate calmer, in this decision, she rose to
return to the noisy camp, extending her walk, however, by a detour towards the
Heidelberg road, for she was anxious to be alone as long as she could. She had
been walking some ten minutes when she caught sight of a cart that seemed
familiar to her, with three horses harnessed in front of it and one tied
behind, which were also familiar. There were many men walking alongside the
cart all talking eagerly.</p>
<p>Jess halted to let the little procession go by, when suddenly she perceived
John Niel among these men and recognised the Zulu Mouti on the box.
<i>There</i> was the man whom she had just vowed never to see again, and the
sight of him seemed to take all her strength out of her, so that she felt
inclined to sink down upon the veldt. His sudden appearance was almost uncanny
in the sharpness of its illustration of her impotence in the hands of Fate. She
felt it then; all in an instant it seemed to be borne in upon her mind that she
could not help herself, but was only the instrument in the hands of a superior
power whose will she was fulfilling through the workings of her passion, and to
whom her individual fate was a matter of little moment. It was inconclusive
reasoning and perilous doctrine, but it must be allowed that the circumstances
gave it a colour of truth. And, after all, the border-line between fatalism and
free-will has never been quite authoritatively settled, even by St. Paul, so
perhaps she was right. Mankind does not like to admit it, but it is, at the
least, a question whether we can oppose our little wills against the forces of
a universal law, or derange the details of an unvarying plan to suit the petty
wants and hopes of individual mortality. Jess was a clever woman, but it would
take a wiser head than hers to know where or when to draw that red line across
the writings of our lives.</p>
<p>On came the cart and the knot of men, then suddenly John looked up and saw her
gazing at him with those dark eyes that at times did indeed seem as though they
were the windows of her soul. He turned and said something to his companions
and to the Zulu Mouti, who went on with the cart, then he came towards her
smiling and with outstretched hand.</p>
<p>“How do you do, Jess?” he said. “So I have found you all
right?”</p>
<p>She took his hand and answered, almost angrily, “Why have you come? Why
did you leave Bessie and my uncle?”</p>
<p>“I came because I was sent, also because I wished it. I wanted to bring
you back home before Pretoria was besieged.”</p>
<p>“You must have been mad! How could you expect to get back? We shall both
be shut up here together now.”</p>
<p>“So it appears. Well, things might be worse,” he added cheerfully.</p>
<p>“I do not think that anything could be worse,” she answered with a
stamp of her foot, then, quite thrown off her balance, she burst incontinently
into a flood of tears.</p>
<p>John Niel was a very simple-minded man, and it never struck him to attribute
her grief to any other cause than anxiety at the state of affairs and at her
incarceration for an indefinite period in a besieged town that ran the daily
risk of being taken <i>vi et armis</i>. Still he was a little hurt at the
manner of his reception after his long and most perilous journey, which is not,
perhaps, to be wondered at.</p>
<p>“Well, Jess,” he said, “I think that you might speak a little
more kindly to me, considering—considering all things. There, don’t
cry, they are all right at Mooifontein, and I dare say that we shall win back
there somehow some time or other. I had a nice business to get here at all, I
can tell you.”</p>
<p>Suddenly she stopped weeping and smiled, her tears passing away like a summer
storm. “How did you get through?” she asked. “Tell me all
about it, Captain Niel,” and accordingly he did.</p>
<p>She listened in silence while he sketched the chief events of his journey, and
when he had done she spoke in quite a changed tone.</p>
<p>“It is very good and kind of you to have risked your life like this for
me. Only I wonder that you did not all of you see that it would be of no use.
We shall both be shut up here together now, that is all, and that will be very
sad for you and Bessie.”</p>
<p>“Oh! So you have heard of our engagement?” he said.</p>
<p>“Yes, I read Bessie’s letter about a couple of hours ago, and I
congratulate you both very much. I think that you will have the sweetest and
loveliest wife in South Africa, Captain Niel; and I think that Bessie will have
a husband any woman might be proud of;” and she half bowed and half
curtseyed to him as she said it, with a graceful little air of dignity that was
very taking.</p>
<p>“Thank you,” he answered simply; “yes, I think I am a very
lucky fellow.”</p>
<p>“And now,” she said, “we had better go and see about the
cart. You will have to find a stand for it in that wretched laager. You must be
very tired and hungry.”</p>
<p>A few minutes’ walk brought them to the cart, which Mouti had outspanned
close to Mrs. Neville’s waggon, where Jess and her friends were living,
and the first person they saw was Mrs. Neville herself. She was a good,
motherly colonial woman, accustomed to a rough life, and one not easily
disturbed by emergencies.</p>
<p>“My goodness, Captain Niel!” she cried, as soon as Jess had
introduced him. “Well, you are plucky to have forced your way through all
those horrid Boers! I am sure I wonder that they did not shoot you or beat you
to death with <i>sjambocks</i>, the brutes. Not that there is much use in your
coming, for you will never be able to take Jess back till Sir George Colley
relieves us, and that can’t be for two months, they say. Well, there is
one thing; Jess will be able to sleep in the cart now, and you can have one of
the patrol-tents and camp alongside. It won’t be quite proper, perhaps,
but in these times we can’t stop to consider propriety. There, there, you
go off to the Governor. He will be glad enough to see you, I’ll be bound;
I saw him at the other end of the camp five minutes ago. We will have the cart
unpacked and arrange about the horses.”</p>
<p>Thus adjured, John departed, and when he returned half an hour afterwards,
having told his eventful tale, which did not, however, convey any information
of general value, he was rejoiced to find that the process of “getting
things straight” was almost complete. What was better still, Jess had
fried him a beefsteak over the camp fire, and was now employed in serving it on
a little table by the waggon. He sat down on a stool and ate his meal heartily
enough, while Jess waited on him and Mrs. Neville chattered incessantly.</p>
<p>“By the way,” she said, “Jess tells me that you are going to
marry her sister. Well, I wish you joy. A man wants a wife in this country. It
isn’t like England, where in five cases out of six he might as well go
and cut his throat as get married. It saves him money here, and children are a
blessing, as Nature meant them to be, and not a burden, as civilisation has
made them. Lord, how my tongue does run on! It isn’t delicate to talk
about children when you have only been engaged a couple of weeks; but, you see,
that’s what it comes to after all. She’s a pretty girl, Bessie, and
a good one too—I don’t know her much—though she hasn’t
got the brains of Jess here. That reminds me; as you are engaged to Bessie, of
course you can look after Jess, and nobody will think anything of it. Ah! if
you only knew what a place this is for talk, though their talk is pretty well
scared out of them now, I’m thinking. My husband is coming round
presently to the cart to help to get Jess’s bed into it. Lucky it’s
big. We are such a tight fit in that waggon that I shall be downright glad to
see the last of the dear girl; though, of course, you’ll both come and
take your meals with us.”</p>
<p>Jess heard all this in silence. She could not well insist upon stopping in the
crowded waggon; it would be asking too much; and, besides, she had passed one
night there, and that was quite enough for her. Once she suggested that she
should try to persuade the nuns to take her in at the convent, but Mrs. Neville
suppressed the notion instantly.</p>
<p>“Nuns!” she said; “nonsense. When your own
brother-in-law—at least he will be your brother-in-law if the Boers
don’t make an end of us all—is here to take care of you,
don’t talk about going to a parcel of nuns. It will be as much as they
can do to look after themselves, I’ll be bound.”</p>
<p>As for John, he ate his steak and said nothing. The arrangement seemed a very
proper one to him.</p>
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