|
Before he had quite finished, there was a loud barking at a little distance.
"Why, there he is, tracking me out," cried Dyke; and, whistling sharply, the barking came again more loudly, a shout bringing Duke to his side, while, as soon as the dog understood what was wanted, he darted off after the fallen birds, bringing in two directly from close to where the assegais had been poised.
"Good dog! Two more! Seek!" cried Dyke. "Off with you!"
The dog bounded away again, and Dyke stood whistling softly to himself as he examined his prizes, and admired their clean-looking, speckled plumage.
Duke was back directly, gave up the birds, coughed his teeth clear of fluffy feathers, and then turned and stood looking in the direction from whence he had fetched the guinea-fowls.
"Oh yes," said his master, "there'll be plenty more soon, but we've got enough; so come along."
Dyke shouldered his gun, carried the speckled birds in a bunch by their legs, and walked away toward the edge of the forest patch, the dog looking back from time to time, and barking uneasily. But the master could not read the dog's warning; he attributed it to the guinea-fowl coming to roost, though black-faced lurkers, armed with assegais, were on the dog's trail till they were safely out of the forest, at whose edge the four Kaffirs paused to watch, while Dyke went on toward home.
And now the dog forgot that which he had seen in the wood. The open veldt, with the kopje on their left, made him recall something else, and he began barking and trying to lead his master away beyond the ostrich-pens, Dyke understanding him well enough; but with his game in hand, and the purpose for which it was intended in mind, for a long time he refused to go.
At last, though, he yielded to the dog's importunity, feeling sure that a portion of their stock must be in trouble, and that Duke had been watching it for some time past, till he heard the reports of the gun.
CHAPTER TWENTY FIVE.
DUKE'S FIND.
Dyke had not far to go—the dog running on and looking back from time to time to see if it was followed, and then going on again. "He has found a snake, perhaps," thought Dyke, as he looked in every direction, but could see no sign of the bullocks. Duke went on.
"Here! I want to get back with these birds, old fellow," cried Dyke at last. "Come along back."
But the dog stood fast, and began to bark; then plunged in amongst some milk-bush, and barked louder than ever.
"Well, I must see what he has found," thought Dyke, and just as it was getting dark, he ran on the hundred yards which separated him from the dog, and found him in a state of great excitement.
"Now then, stupid, what is it?" cried Dyke. "I shan't go any farther, mind.—Why, hullo! old chap, what have you got? Why, they're lion cubs!"
Sure enough they were; a pair of big, chubby, whimpering cubs, that in their heavy way resembled puppies more than creatures of the cat family.
"Here, come away," cried Dyke, after kneeling down to examine the stupid-looking, tawny things, "We shall make the mother feel as fierce as can be, and there'll be no mercy for us then, old chap. But how in the world did they come to be here? Their mother must be prowling about the place, and—Oh, I see," he cried, as the light came. "It was their mother I shot, and the poor little creatures are starving. It would be a mercy to kill them."
But the cubs whimpered and whined, and seemed so amiable, that Dyke felt as if he could not be merciful in that way.
"Seems stupid," he muttered, "but I can't go murdering things without there's a good reason for it."
Slinging his gun over his back, he took a piece of leathern thong from his pocket and tied the legs of his birds together, noticing that, as he did so, Duke was poking the young lions about with his nose, and the fat little creatures, which were about a third of his size, were snuggling up to him for comfort, whining like puppies the while.
"Here, Duke!" he cried; "carry."
He slung the birds on either side of the dog's neck, and then stooping down, picked up the fat, heavy cubs, tucked one under each arm, where they nestled to him, and then started for home.
"Nice position for me if I'm wrong," he muttered. "Suppose their mother isn't dead, and she finds me stealing her young ones. Ugh!"
But he was not wrong, and soon after entered the house with his prizes, to find Emson awake and watching him; while Tanta Sal crouched on the floor, gazing at the lamp which she had lit and seemed to admire intensely.
"How are you?" was Dyke's first question, and on being assured in a faint echo of a voice that his brother was better, he handed two of the birds to the woman to take and stew down at once.
"Take lion's babies too?" she said, shaking her head severely. "Not good eat."
"Who wants to eat them?" said Dyke. "No: I'm going to keep them. Come, make haste. I want to see those birds cooking into soup."
"Soup? Ooomps. Tant know make tea—coffee—dinner."
"No, no; soup."
"Ooomps; make bird tea, coffee? Baas Joe drink in spoon."
"Yes, that's right; you understand," cried Dyke, and the woman hurried out with the birds, the dog following her, his instinct teaching him that there would be the heads and possibly other odds and ends to fall to his share. But before going, he went and poked at the two cubs and uttered a low bark.
"What do you think of these, Joe?" said Dyke, picking up his prizes, and placing them on the bed.
"Dangerous, little un," said Emson feebly. "The mother will scent them out."
"No: I feel sure it was their mother I shot last night. She lies out yonder where Tant and I dragged her."
"Ah!" said Emson softly, "it was her skin Tant brought in to show me. She stripped it off to-night."
"She did? Bravo! well done, Tant! But look here, Joe: couldn't I bring these cubs up?"
"Yes, for a time; but they would grow dangerous. Try."
That night, after finding very little difficulty in getting the cubs to suck a couple of pieces of rag soaked in milk, Dyke dropped asleep, to dream that the lioness had come to life again, and was waiting at the door for her cubs; but it proved to be only Tanta Sal once more, just at daybreak, with a tin of the bird soup, which she had set to stew overnight, and woke up early to get ready for the baas. Of this Emson partook with avidity as soon as he woke, his brother laughing merrily as he fed him with a wooden spoon, while Tant grinned with delight.
"Jack say Baas Joe go die," she cried, clapping her legs with her hands. "Jack tief."
Dyke endorsed the words that morning when he visited the still unladen wagon, for a bag of sugar and some more meal had disappeared.
He stood rubbing his ear viciously.
"It's my fault for not taking the things indoors," he said in a vexed tone of voice; "but I can't do everything, and feeding those cubs last night made me forget to set Duke to watch."
Then a thought struck him, and he put his head outside the tilt and shouted for Tant, who came running up, and at once climbed into the wagon.
"Did you fetch some mealies from here last night?" asked Dyke.
"No: Jack," cried the woman excitedly—"Jack tief."
"Yes; I thought so," said Dyke thoughtfully. "There, that will do;" and making up his mind to watch that night, he went back to the house, had a few words with his brother, and then went round to see that all was right, coming back to breakfast after Tanta had shown him the lioness's skin pegged out to dry.
Dyke watched that night, but in vain; Duke watched the next night also in vain, for there had been too much to do for the wagon to be emptied and the stores brought in.
For Emson required, in his weak state, an enormous deal of attention, which, however, was a delight to his brother, who had the satisfaction day by day of seeing him grow slightly better; while the Kaffir woman was indefatigable, and never seemed to sleep, Dyke's difficulty being to keep her from making the patient travel in a retrograde path by giving him too much to eat.
"Baas Joe muss plenty meat, tea, coffee," she said. "No eat, Baas Joe die."
Hence Dyke had hard work to keep the larder supplied. Fortunately, however, the guinea-fowls' roosting place proved to be almost inexhaustible, and twice over a little buck fell to the boy's gun.
Then there was an ample supply of milk, some eggs, and dried meat to stew down, so that the patient did not fare so badly, as his returning strength showed.
But progress with the ostrich-farm was at a standstill, and Dyke used to look at the great stilt-stalking birds with a sorrowful air, and wish they were all running wild.
"But you are getting better fast, Joe," he said one evening as he sat by the couch.
"Getting better slowly, not fast, little un," replied Emson sadly. "Heaven knows how I pray for strength, so as to relieve you, boy."
"Who wants to be relieved?" cried Dyke roughly. "All I mind is not getting on better with the work, because now I have not Jack to help. I get on so slowly."
"I know, Dyke," said Emson sadly, as he lay there propped up on his bed.
"Hullo! What's the matter? What have I done?"
"Nothing but what is patient and persevering."
"Oh, no! don't say that," cried the boy. "I've always been a discontented grumbler ever since I've been here, Joe. But, I say, don't call me Dyke. It sounds as if you were getting formal with me, and as if we were not as we used to be before you were taken bad."
"But we are, old chap. Better and more brotherly than ever. I never knew till now how brave, and true, and manly—Ha! he's gone," sighed Emson sadly; for Dyke had made a sudden bound, and dashed out of the place, keeping away for fully half an hour, before he thrust in his head once more.
"Ah, there you are," said Emson. "Come and sit down. I want to speak to you."
"Look here, Joe," cried Dyke. "I'm baas now, and I shall do as I like. Are you going to talk any more of that nonsense? I am going if you are."
"I shall not talk nonsense. I only said—"
"You stop, sir. Don't you get only saiding again, for I won't have it. It's weak, and sickly, and sentimental. Who wants to be told that he helped his brother when he was ill? Such rot! Why, wouldn't you have fed me and washed my face if I'd grown as stupid and weak as you? There, shake hands. I'll forgive you this time; but if ever— Hooray-y-y-y! He's getting some muscle in his arm again. You can feel him grip! Why, a fortnight ago it was like shaking hands with a dead chicken. I say, Joe, old man, you are heaps better."
"Yes, I'm getting better. I feel as if I shall live now."
"Live? Now there's a jolly old stupid. Just as if you were ever going to feel anything else. Look here, Joe: I shall have to make an alteration. I've been spoiling you, giving you too many good things. And to begin with, I think I'll cut your hair."
"Isn't it short enough?" said Emson rather piteously, as he feebly raised his hand to his temples.
"Yes, there: it looks nice and fashionable. But all down at the back it's like Breezy's mane."
"Then you shall cut it, Dyke."
"Ah-h-h!"
"Well then, young un. But how is poor Breezy?"
"Getting wild for want of riding. I went toward her yesterday, and she began dancing a pas-de-deux-legs on her fore-hoofs, and sparred at the sky with her hind. Wait a bit, and you and I'll take some of the steam out of her and Longshanks. We'll hunt out no end of ostriches' nests in the farther-off part of the veldt. Here, what are you shaking your jolly old head for? It's been quite shaky enough, hasn't it?"
"I was thinking of the ostrich-farming, little un," said Emson sadly. "No, my lad, no more time wasted over that. Two hundred years hence they may have got a more manageable strain of domesticated birds that will live well in confinement. We've had our try, and failed."
"Bah! Not half tried. I haven't. No, Joe, we won't give up. We'll do it yet. Why, it was that black scoundrel Jack who caused half the mischief. Oh, Joe, if I could only have caught him when he was knocking those poor young birds on the head, and had my gun with me."
"What! would you have shot at him, young un?"
"If I'd had small shot in one of the barrels. They'd have just gone through, and peppered his hide nicely. I say, Joe, his clothes wouldn't have stopped the shot corns."
"No," said Emson, smiling; "his clothes wouldn't have stopped them."
"Hooray-y-y-y!" shouted Dyke again, and the two lion cubs looked over the packing-case in which they were confined, wonderingly.
"Look at him! A regular half laugh. We shall have the whole laugh soon. But there, I mustn't stop, wasting time here."
"Yes; stay a little longer, little un. I want to talk to you," said Emson.
"About my being such a nice, good boy—so brave and so noodley? No, you don't. I'm off!"
"No, no; I will not say a word about that. I want to talk to you."
"But the ostriches want feeding."
"They must wait," said Emson sadly. "They've made us wait for profit. Look here, little un; sit down."
"Well, if you want it. But, honour bright: no buttering me."
"I want to talk about our future."
"Well, I can tell you that, Joe. We're going to make a big success of the farm."
"No, boy; we are going to give it up."
"What! Sell it?"
"No; I should be ashamed to take money off a man for so worthless a bargain. We are going to scrape together what skins and feathers are ours, so as to pay our way, and going home."
"What! empty?" cried Dyke. "That we won't."
"We must, boy. I shall never be myself till I have been under a good doctor."
"What nonsense, Joe. There, let's talk about something else.—I say, how playful the cubs get; but they're more like big Saint Bernard pups than kittens."
"Let us talk about our future, boy," said Emson rather sternly. "I was thinking bitterly of our prospects when I was sickening for this fever, and I have thought more about them since I have been lying here helpless; and as soon as I can get about, we must prepare for going home."
"Beaten! Go home, and say: 'It's of no use, father; we're a poor, helpless pair.'"
"We must accept the inevitable, little un."
"There isn't any inevitable when you're my age, Joe. One always used to feel on a bad day that sooner or later the fish would begin to bite."
"Yes, but we used to change to another place."
"Sometimes. Well, let's change to another place, then. But it would be a pity. We've got never-failing water here, and even if the lions and baboons do come sometimes, it's a capital place. I say, Joe, have another try."
"You've quite changed your tune, old fellow," said Emson mournfully. "Do you remember?"
"Why, of course. What fellow doesn't remember what a donkey he has been? I've often thought of it while you were ill, Joe, and of what a nuisance I must have been while you were so patient. And I said to myself—There, never mind that—I say, Joe, do you really mean for us to go back beaten?"
"Yes."
"Not have one more try!"
"No: I am too much broken down."
"But I'm not. I'm getting full of pluck and work now, and I'll do anything to keep things going till you come round."
Emson shook his head sadly.
"I say it is of no use, my lad; we are trying an impossibility."
"Then let's try something else. What do you think old Morgenstern said?"
"That we were wasting time over the ostriches."
"Well, yes, he did say that. But he said something else."
"Yes? What?"
"That he heard they were finding diamonds out on the veldt, and that he should advise you to have a good try."
"Moonshine, boy. The other day it was gold. Do you think we should be wise in spending our days hunting for diamonds?"
Dyke scratched his ear, glanced at his brother, and then shook his head.
"Come, you are wise in that. Old Morgenstern is a good, honest, old fellow, but it does not do to take anybody's advice on your own affairs, about which you know best yourself. There, I must not talk any more; but don't go dreaming about diamonds, little un. You and I did not come out here to make a fortune, but to get a straightforward, honest living."
Emson closed his eyes, and Dyke sat watching him till his regular breathing told that he was fast asleep, and then the lad went out to go and busy himself about the place, meaning to take his gun that evening and make for the patch of forest beyond the kopje, so as to shoot a couple or so of the guinea-fowl; but a sharp storm came on and prevented him, though at bed-time, when he looked out, after seeing that the lion cubs and dog were curled up happily enough together, the stars were shining brilliantly, and a dull, soft light in the east told that the full moon would soon be up.
Five minutes later he was in his corner, feeling very drowsy, and a little troubled in his mind about his brother's determination.
"But Joe'll think differently when he gets better," Dyke said to himself; and then began to think whether he ought not to have watched the wagon.
"One can't work and watch, too," he thought as he yawned, "but I might have made Duke sleep in the wagon, and I will."
But he was so utterly wearied out that he kept putting off the getting up from minute to minute, till he forgot all about it in sleep, plunging at once into a troubled dream, in which he saw his brother standing, angry and threatening with a big stick in his hand, and about to bring it down upon him with a heavy thud for neglecting their valuable stores, when he awoke to find that there was some substance in that dream.
CHAPTER TWENTY SIX.
THE NIGHT ATTACK.
For a few moments Dyke could not collect himself sufficiently to speak, but stared at the black figure leaning over him, with what seemed to be a heavy club, while the shadow cast by the feeble lamp upon the wall to his left looked prodigious.
"Get up! Come!" was whispered in his ear, and he felt the stout cudgel pressed upon his legs. "You, Tant?" he faltered. "Oomps. Jump. Jack come. Jack tief."
"What!" cried Dyke springing up, half-dressed, as he had lain down.
"Shoo!" whispered the woman. "Bring gun, shoot."
"You want me to shoot Jack?"
"Oomps. Wagon. Kaffirs take all mealies."
"You're a pretty sort of a wife," thought Dyke, as he caught up his loaded gun from the corner, and wondered that the dog had not stirred.
Just then Tanta Sal touched his arm, pointed to the light, and made a puffing sound with her lips.
"Put it out?" he whispered.
She nodded, and Dyke turned down the wick, so that the place was only lit up by the pale rays of the moon.
"Where are they?" whispered Dyke. "At the wagon?"
"No, not come; Jack come say Tant Sal go 'way to-night 'long o' Jack. Gone fetch Kaffir, carry mealies. Come."
She took his arm tightly and led him to the door, which he found ajar, and as soon as they were outside she closed it after them.
"Stop a moment. Let's have the dog."
"No: dog make noise, and Jack top. Come."
The woman led him to the wagon, and mounting on to the box, opened the canvas and crept in silently, while the boy hesitated to follow.
Suppose it was a trap, and Tanta had her husband and two or three men in waiting there.
"Absurd!" he thought the next moment. "Why should they hurt me? They could have robbed the wagon without."
Mounting then quickly, he felt his arm seized, and he was half drawn into the wagon, where all was black on one side, while the canvas tilt showed faintly in the moonlight on the other.
Dyke was just able to make out that the woman was watching by the canvas, which hung over the front; then she reached back to him.
"Jack say try kill Baas Dyke, but dog come. Kill Baas Dyke some day."
"That's nice," whispered the boy. "What for?"
"Jack tief. Want wagon, want horse, want all."
"Then it's war," said Dyke, "and he shan't have them."
"Shoo!" whispered the woman, and she leaned forward with her head half out of the opening. Then turned quickly.
"Jack come, Jack one, Jack one, Jack one."
"Four of them?" whispered Dyke.
"Oomps. Baas Dyke shoot."
The boy pressed the triggers as he drew up the cocks of his piece, so that the clicking made was extremely faint, and then stood ready and expectant. But he had not long to wait. For almost directly there was a dull sound as of footsteps; a heavy breathing, and hands tugged at the tightly fastened canvas at the back of the wagon. Then there was a low whispering. Whoever it was passed along to the front of the wagon, and then there was a heavy breathing as the visitors swung themselves up on to the wagon-box, Dyke judging from the sounds that either three or four people had climbed up. Then the canvas was dragged back, and as Dyke pointed his gun, hesitating about firing, and then deciding to shoot overhead to startle the marauders, one crept in.
At that moment there was a whizz and the sound of a tremendous blow, followed by a loud yell of pain and a perfect shower of blows delivered with wonderful rapidity upon the attacking party, who sprang out and fell from the wagon front.
It was all almost momentary, and then Dyke was leaning out through the canvas, and fired twice at random.
"It won't hit, only frighten them," he thought; and then he turned cold, for at the second report there was a yell, the sound of a fall, a scuffling noise, and a series of cries almost such as would be uttered by a dog, and growing more and more distant, as the boy listened, feeling convinced that he had shot Duke.
Tanta Sal was of a different opinion.
"Dat Jack," she said, laughing softly. "Jack tief. No come kill Tant now."
Dyke was silent for a few moments. He was thinking about what cartridges he had placed in his gun, and remembered that they were Number 6, which he had intended for the guinea-fowl.
"Those wouldn't kill him," he muttered, "and he was a long way off."
"No get mealies now," said the woman, interrupting the boy's musings. "Baas Dyke go bed?"
"Stop! suppose they are waiting?" whispered Dyke.
"Wait? What for?" she replied. "No. All run away. No come now."
She climbed out on to the box and held the canvas aside for Dyke to follow, which he did, and then tied the opening up again, and leaped down to stand listening to the dog's barking within the house.
"Tant go sleep," said the woman; and she hurried off, while Dyke opened the door for the dog to bound out growling, and ready to rush off at a word, but Dyke called him in and shut the door, fastening it now; the fact of the dog sleeping inside being, he thought, sufficient protection—the coming of the woman not being noticed by Duke, who, of course, set her down as a friend.
But Dyke did not lie down for some time after assuring himself that the noise had not roused his brother from his heavy sleep. The boy was uneasy about the woman. She had told him that Jack had threatened to kill her. Suppose he came back now with his companions to take revenge upon her for betraying their plans.
"She wouldn't know," he said to himself, after carefully weighing the matter over in his mind, to decide that they would be afraid to come again after such a reception.
So, concluding at last that the woman would be quite safe, Dyke reloaded his gun, placed it ready, and lay down once more, conscious of the fact now that the dog was awake and watchful.
Five minutes after he was asleep, and did not wake till the Kaffir woman came and tapped at the door, to show him, with a look of triumph, four assegais left behind by the visitors of the past night.
"Dat Jack," she said, holding up one. "Dose oder fellow."
"Will they come for them?"
"No. Jack no come again. Get other wife. Tant Sal don't want any more."
CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN.
OOM STARTLES HIS FRIENDS.
The days glided peacefully by, with Dyke kept busy enough supplying the larder, especially for his brother's benefit, and under his treatment the poor fellow grew better.
But so slowly; and he was the mere ghost of his former self when he began to crawl out of the house by the help of a stick, to sit in the shade and watch Dyke as he was busy about the place.
There was very little to vary the monotony of their life. A lion came one night, but did not molest horse or bullock. They had visits, too, from the jackals, but Tanta Sal was right—Jack came no more, and they saw nothing of the Kaffirs who had been his companions, though Dyke found a rough hut and traces of a fire in the patch of forest close to where he went to shoot the guinea-fowl, showing that he must often have been pretty near the Kaffirs' hiding-place.
In fact, Jack had had a very severe peppering, and felt not the slightest inclination to risk receiving another.
The subject of giving up Kopfontein was often discussed, but even if it were done, it seemed evident that many months must elapse before Emson would be fit to travel; so the subject was talked of less often, though one thing was evident both to Dyke and his brother—their scheme of ostrich-farming had completely broken down, and unless a bold attempt were made to start afresh, they would gradually become poorer and poorer, for alone, all Dyke's efforts to collect valuable skins were disposed to be rather unfruitful, try hard as he would.
Months had passed, and they had had no more black visitors, but one day Tanta Sal rushed into the house where the brothers were seated at dinner, with such a look of excitement upon her features, that Dyke sprang up, seized one of the guns and handed another to his brother, who stood up, looking weak, but determined to help if danger were at hand.
But Tanta gesticulated, pushed the guns away, and signed to Dyke to follow.
The cause of the woman's excitement was evident directly, for there, a mile away, was a wagon drawn by a long team of oxen, and it was evident that they were to have visitors at the farm.
"Some poor wretch going up in the wilds to seek his fortune," said Emson rather sadly. "I wish him better luck than ours, young un."
"Oh, I say, Joe, don't talk in that doleful way," cried Dyke excitedly. "This is so jolly. It's like being Robinson Crusoe and seeing a sail. Here, wait while I fetch the glass."
Dyke returned the next minute with his hands trembling so that he could hardly focus and steady the "optic tube." Then he shouted in his excitement, and handed the telescope to his brother.
"Why, it's that fat old Dutchman, Morgenstern! Who'd have thought of seeing him?"
Sure enough it was the old trader, seated like the Great Mogul in the old woodcuts. He was upon the wagon-box, holding up an enormously long whip, and two black servants were with him—one at the head of the long team of twelve oxen, the other about the middle of the double line of six, as the heavy wagon came slowly along, the bullocks seeming to crawl.
"I am glad," cried Dyke. "I say, Joe, see his great whip? He looked in the glass as if he were fishing."
"Tant make fine big cake—kettle boil—biltong tea?" asked the Kaffir woman hospitably.
"Yes," said Emson quietly. "But," he continued, as Tanta Sal ran off to the back of the house, "it may not be Morgenstern, young un. Fat Germans look very much alike."
"Oh, but I feel sure this is the old chap.—I say, what's the German for fat old man?"
"I don't know. My German has grown rusty out here. Dicker alte Mann, perhaps. Why?"
"Because I mean to call him that. He always called me booby."
"No, bube:—boy," said Emson, smiling.
They stood watching the wagon creeping nearer and nearer for a minute or two, Dyke longing to run to meet the visitors; but he suddenly recalled the orderly look at Morgenstern's, and rushed back into the house to try to make their rough board a little more presentable; and he was still in the midst of this task, when, with a good deal of shouting from the Kaffir servants, and sundry loud cracks of the great whip, the wagon, creaking and groaning, stopped at the fence in front of the house, and the old German shouted:
"Ach! mein goot vrient Emzon, how you vas to-day? Vere is der bube?"
"Dicker alte Mann!" said Dyke between his teeth, and hurriedly brushing away some crumbs, and throwing a skin over the chest in which various odds and ends were kept, he listened to the big bluff voice outside as Morgenstern descended.
"It is goot to shack hant mit an Englander. Bood you look tin, mein vrient. You haf been down mit dem vever?"
"Yes, I've been very ill."
"That is nod goot. Bood you ged besser now. Ach, here is der poy! Ach! mein goot liddle bube, ant how you vas?"
Dyke's hands were seized, and to his horror the visitor hugged him to his broad chest, and kissed him loudly on each cheek.
"Oh, I'm quite well," said Dyke rather ungraciously, as soon as he could get free.
"Ov goorse you vas. Grade, pig, oogly, shtrong poy. I am clad to zee you again. You did got home guite zave?"
"Eh? Oh yes. But that's ever so long ago."
"Zo? Ach! I haf been zo busy as neffer vas. Now you led mein two poys outspan, eh?"
"Of course," said Emson warmly.—"Show them where the best pasture is, toward the water, Dyke.—Come in, Herr. You look hot and tired."
"Ja, zo. I am sehr hot, and you give me zomeden to drink. I haf zom peaudivul dea in dem vagons. I give you zom to make."
An hour later, with the visitor and his men refreshed, Morgenstern smiled at Dyke, and winked both his eyes. "You know vad I vants?" he said.
"Yes; your pipe."
"Ja, I wand mein bibe. You gom mit me do god mein bibe und mein dobacco din; und den I light oop, und shmoke und dalk do you, und you go all round, und zhow me den ostridge-bird varm."
They all went out together, the visitor noticing everything; and laying his hand upon Emson's shoulder, he said: "You muss god besser, mein vrient. You are nod enough dick—doo tin."
"Oh, I'm mending fast," said Emson hastily, and then they stopped by the wagon, with Morgenstern's eyes twinkling as he turned to Dyke.
"You haf been zo goot," he said; "you make me ead und trinken zo mooch, dat I gannod shoomp indo den vagon. I am zo dick. Good! You shoomp in, and get me mein bibe und dobacco din."
Dyke showed him that he could; fetched it out, and after the old man had filled, lit up, and begun to form smoke-clouds, he said: "You dake me now do see if mein pullocks and my poys is ead und trink."
"Oh, they're all right," cried Dyke.
"Ja. Bood I always like do zee for meinzelf. Zom beobles ist nod as goot as you vas, mein vrient. A good draveller ist kind do his beast und his plack poy."
The visitor was soon satisfied, for he was taken round to where Tanta Sal was smiling at her two guests, who, after making a tremendous meal, had lain down and gone to sleep, while the oxen could be seen at a distance contentedly grazing in a patch of rich grass.
"You haf no lions apout here," said the old man, "to gom und shdeal mein gattle?—Ah, vot ist das?" he cried, turning pale as he heard a peculiar noise from somewhere close at hand. Quigg! "You ged der goon und shoot, or der lion gom und preak von of der oxen's pack."
"It's all right," cried Dyke, laughing. "Come and look here."
The old man looked rather wild and strange, for, as Dyke threw open a rough door in the side of one of the sheds, the two lion cubs, now growing fast towards the size of a retriever dog, came bounding out.
"Ach! shdop. Do not led them ead der poor alter pecause he is zo nice und vat. Eh, dey will not hurt me?"
"No!" cried Dyke; "look here: they are as tame and playful as kittens."
Dyke proved it by dropping on his knees and rolling the clumsy, heavy cubs over, letting them charge him and roll him over in turn.
"Ach! id is vonterful," said the old man, wiping the perspiration from his face. "I did tought dey vas go to eat den alt man. You make dem dame like dot mit dem jambok."
"With a whip? No," cried Dyke; "with kindness. Look here: pat them and pull their ears. They never try to bite. You should see them play about with the dog."
"Boor liddle vellows den," said the old man, putting out his hand nervously. "Ach, no; id is doo bat, you liddle lion. Vot you mean py schmell me all over? I am nod for you do ead."
Dyke laughed, for the cubs turned away and sneezed. They did not approve of the tobacco.
"There, come along," he cried; and the cubs bounded to him. "I'll shut them up for fear they should frighten your oxen."
"Das is goot," said the old man with a sigh of satisfaction, as he saw the door closed upon the two great playful cats. "Bood you zhall mind, or zom day I zhall gom ant zee you, but vind you are not ad home, vor die young lion haf grow pig und ead you all oop."
"Yes," said Emson; "we shall have to get rid of them before very long. They may grow dangerous some day."
"Ach! I dell you vot, mein vrient Emzon, I puy dose lion ov you, or you led me shell dem, to go do Angland or do Sharmany."
"Do you think you could?"
"Do I dink I good? Ja, I do drade in effery dings. I gom now to puy iffory und vedders. You shell me all you vedders, und I gif you good brice."
"I have a very poor lot, Morgenstern, but I'll sell them to you. Dyke and I have done very badly."
"Zo? Bood you will zell do me. I zaid do myself I vould go und zee mein vrient Emzon und den bube. He zay I am honest man.—You droost me?"
"Of course," said Emson frankly. "I know you for what you are, Morgenstern."
The old man lowered his pipe, and held out his fat hand.
"I dank you, Herr Emzon," he said, shaking his host's hand warmly. "Id is goot do veel dot von has a vrient oud here in der desert land. Bood I am gonzern apout you, mein vrient. You haf peen very pad. You do look sehr krank; unt you zay you haf tone padly. I am moch gonzern."
"We've been very unlucky," said Emson, as the old man seated himself upon a block of granite, close to one of the ostrich-pens, while an old cock bird reached over and began inspecting his straw-hat.
"Zo I am zorry. Bood vy do you not dry somedings else? Hund vor skins or vor iffory? I puy dem all. Und not dry do keep den ostridge-bird in dem gage, bood go und zhoot him, und zell die vedders do me. Or der is anodder dings. Hi! You bube: did you dell den bruders apout den diamonts?"
"Oh yes, I told him," said Dyke sadly; "but he has been so ill. I thought once he was going to die."
"Zo! Den tunder! what vor you no gom und vetch me und mine old vomans? Die frau gom und vrighten avay das vevers. She is vonterful old vomans. She make you like to be ill."
"I was all alone, and couldn't leave him," said Dyke. "I was afraid he would die if I did."
"Ja, zo. You vas quite right, mein young vrient Van Dyke. You are a goot poy, unt I loaf you. Zhake mein hant."
The process was gone through, Dyke shrinking a little for fear he would be kissed.
"Und zo die pirts do nod get on?" said Morgenstern after a pause, during which he sat smoking.
"No, in spite of all our care," said Emson.
"Ach! vot ist das?" cried the old man, looking sharply round, as his hat was snatched off by the long-necked bird which had been inspecting it. "You vill gif dot pack to me, shdupit. Id ist nod goot do eat, und I am sure id vould not vid your shdupid liddle het.—Dank you, bube," he continued, as Duke rescued and returned the hat. "Eh? you dink it goot. Vell, it vas a goot hat; bud you go avay und schvallow shdones, und make vedders for me to puy. Ach! dey are vonny pirts, Van Dyke. Und zo dey all go die?"
"We lost a great many through the Kaffir boy we had," said Dyke, as they walked slowly back to the house.
"Zo? He did not give them do eat?"
"We saw that the birds had enough to eat," said Dyke; "but he used to knock their heads with a stone."
"Zo? Dot vas nod goot. Shdones are goot for die pirts to schvallow, bud nod for outside den het. I dink, mein younger vrient, I should haf knog dot shentleman's het outside mit a shdone, und zay do him, 'You go avay, und neffer gom here again, or I zhall bepper your black shkin mid small shot.'"
"That's what Dyke did do," said Emson, smiling.
"Zo? Ach! he is a vine poy."
"Hah!" sighed the old man as he sank upon a stool in the house. "Now I zhall shmoke mein bibe, und den go do mein wagon und haf a big long schleep, vor I am dire."
He refilled his pipe, and smoked in silence for a few minutes, and then said thoughtfully:
"Emzon, mein vrient, I am zorry to zee you veak und krank, und I am zorry do zee your varm, und I should not be a goot vrient if I did not dell you die truth."
"Of course not," said Emson; and Dyke listened.
"All dese has been a misdake. You dake goot advice, mein vrient. You led die long-legged pirts roon vere dey like, und you go ant look for diamonts."
Emson shook his head.
"No," he said, "I am no diamond hunter. It would not be fair for my brother, either. I have made up my mind what to do. I am weak and ill, and I shall clear off and go back home."
"Nein, nein. Dot is pecause you are krank. Bube, you make your bruder quite vell und dry again. Dot is der vay. You shall nod go home to your alt beobles und say, 'Ve are gom pack like die pad shillings. No goot ad all.'"
"That's what I say," cried Dyke eagerly. "I want to hunt for diamonds, and collect feathers, and skins, and ivory."
"Goot! Und gom und shell all to alt Oom Morgenstern."
"Yes," cried Dyke. "I say: help me to make my brother think as I do."
"Of goorse I will, bube; I know," said the old man, winking his eyes. "It ist pecause he has got das vevers in his pones; bud I haf in mein wagon zix boddles of vizzick to vrighten avay all dot. I zhall give him all die boddles, und I shall bud indo each zom quinines. Id ist pord wein, und he vill dake two glass, effery day, und fery zoon he vill laugh ad dem vevers und zay: 'Hi! Van Dyke, get on your horse and go mit me to get iffory, und vedders, und skins, und diamonts, till we haf got a load, und den we vill go und shell dem to alt Oom Morgenstern—do dem alt ooncle, as you gall him.'—Vot haf you got dere, bube?"
"Two or three of the ostrich skulls that I found with the marks made in them by the Kaffir with a stone," said Dyke, who had just been and opened the door of his case of curiosities.
"Zo!" said the old man. "Ah, und negs time you see dot Kaffir poy you make zome blace like dot upon der dop of his het. Und vot else have you there?—any dings to zell me?"
"Oh no; only a few curiosities I picked up. Look! I took these all out of the gizzard of an old cock ostrich we were obliged to kill, because he broke his leg."
Dyke handed a rough little wooden bowl to the old man.
"Ach! Mein cracious!" he cried.
"You wouldn't have thought it. And here's a great piece of rusty iron that he had swallowed too; I picked it out when I had lost a knife, and thought he had swallowed it."
"Mein cracious!" cried the old man again, and he let his pipe fall and break on the rough table.
Dyke laughed as the visitor turned over the stones and the bit of rusty iron.
"One would have thought it would kill them to swallow things like that, but they're rare birds, Herr Morgenstern; they'll try and swallow anything, even straw-hats."
"Mein cracious, yes!" cried the old man again. "Und so, bube, you did vind all dose—dose dings in dem gizzard ov dot pirt?"
"Yes, all of them. I've got another bowlful that I picked up myself. There are a good many about here."
"You vill let me loog ad dem, mein younger vrient?"
"Of course," said Dyke, and he fetched from the case another rough little bowl that he had obtained from one of the Kaffirs.
There were about ten times as many of the stones, and with them pieces of quartz, shining with metallic traces, and some curious seeds.
Morgenstern turned them over again and again, and glanced at Emson, who looked low-spirited and dejected.
"Ach, zo! Mein cracious!" cried the old man; then, with his voice trembling: "Und zo there are blendy of dose shdones apout here?"
"Yes; I've often seen the ostriches pick them up and swallow them. I suppose it's because they are bright."
"Yes, I suppose it ist pecause they are zo bright," said the old man, pouring out a handful of the stones into his hand, and reverently pouring them back into the rough wooden bowl. Then rising, he shook hands silently with Dyke.
"Going to bed?"
"No, mein younger vrient, nod yed. I haf somedings to zay to your bruder," and turning to Emson, who rose to say good-night to him, he took both his hands in his own, and pumped them up and down.
"Yoseph Emzon," he said, in a deeply moved voice, "I like you when you virst game into dese barts, und I zay dot man is a shentleman; I loaf him, unt den bube, his bruder. Now I gom here und vind you ill, my heart ist zore. I remember, doo, you zay I vas honest man, ant I dank den Lord I am, und dot I feel dot I am, und can say do you, mein young vrient, zom beobles who know what I know now would sheat und rob you, but I vould not. I vont zom days to die, und go ver der Lord vill say, 'Vell done, goot und vaithful zervant.' Yoseph Emzon, I am honest man, und I zay do you, all your droubles are over. You haf been zick, but you vill zoon be quide vell und shdrong, vor you vill not haf das sore heart, und de droubles which make do hair drop out of your het."
"Thank you, Morgenstern. I hope I shall soon be well enough to go," said Emson, sadly.
"Bood you vill not go, mein vrient," cried the old man. "You vill not leave here—mein cracious, no! You vill shdop und get all die ostridge you gan, und shend dem out effery day to big oop zom shdones, und den you vill dig oop der earth vor die pirts to vind more shdones, und when dey haf shvallowed all dey gan, you und der bube here vill kill dem, und empty die gizzards into die powls of water to vash dem."
"No, no, no: what nonsense!" cried Emson, while Dyke suddenly dashed to the table, seized one bowl, looked at its contents, and banged them down again.
"Hurray!" he yelled. "Oh! Herr Morgenstern, is it real?" For like a light shot from one of the crystals, he saw the truth.
"Nonsense, Yoseph Emzon?" cried the old man. "Id is drue wisdom, as goot as der great Zolomon's. Yoseph Emzon, I gongradulade you. You haf had a hart shdruggle, but it is ofer now. Die ostridge pirts haf made you a ferry rich man, und I know dot it is right, for you vill always do goot."
"But—but—do I understand? Are those—those—"
"Yes, Joe," roared Dyke, springing at his brother. "There is no more room for despair now, old chap, for you are rich; and to think we never thought of it being so when you were so unhappy, and—and—Oh, I can't speak now. I don't care for them—only for the good they'll do to you, for they're diamonds, Joe, and there's plenty more diamonds, and all your own."
"Yes, und pig vons, too," said the old trader, with a look of triumph; "und now I must haf somedings to trink. I haf dalk so much, I veel as I shall shoke. Here, bube, you go und shoomp indo dem vagon, und bring one of die plack poddles out of mein box py vere I shleep. Id is der bruder's vizzick, bud ve vill trink a trop to-night do gongradulade him, und you dwo shall trink do der health of dis honesd alt manns."
The bottle of port was fetched, a portion carefully medicated with quinine, and Morgenstern handed it to the invalid.
"Mein vrient," he said, "das is wein dot maketh glad das heart of man. I trink do your goot health."
A few minutes later the old trader said softly:
"I go now to say mein brayer und get mein schleep. Goot-night, mein vrients, und Gott pless you both."
It was about an hour later, when the faint yelping of the jackals was heard in the distance, that Emson said softly:
"Asleep, young un?"
"No, Joe; I can't get off nohow. I say, am I dreaming, or is all this true?"
"It is true, lad, quite true; and I suppose that you and I are going to be rich men."
"Rich man and boy, Joe. I say: are you pleased?"
"More thankful than pleased, Dyke, for now, when we like, we can start for home."
"Without feeling shamefaced and beaten, eh, Joe? Then I am glad. I didn't quite know before, but I do know now; and we can make the old people at home happy, too, Joe."
"As far as money can make them so, little un."
"Hullo!" cried Dyke; "you are a bit happy after all, Joe."
"What makes you say that?"
"You called me 'little un' just in your old way, and I can feel that, with all the worry and disappointment gone now, you'll be able to get well."
Emson was silent for a few minutes, and then he said softly:
"Yes: I feel as if I can get better now; not that I care for the riches for riches' sake, Dyke, but because—Are you listening, little un?"
Dyke was fast asleep, and a few minutes later Emson was sleeping too, and dreaming of faces at home in the old country welcoming him back, not for the sake of the wealth he brought, but because he was once more a hale, strong man.
CHAPTER TWENTY EIGHT.
THE CHANGE THAT CAME.
"It's to-morrow morning, little un."
Dyke did not stir, but he seemed to hear the words.
"Do you hear, little un? Tumble up and bustle. Let's have a comfortable meal when he joins us. Do you hear, sir? Are you going to sleep all day?"
Certainly he was not, for Dyke had sprung up, and was staring across the place at where, half-turned from him, Emson lay gazing at the golden east, where the sun was about to rise.
"Little un: are you going to get up?"
Dyke sprang from his bed, darted to his brother, caught him by the shoulder and pulled him round so as to look him in the face.
"What's the matter, sleepy head?" said Emson, smiling.
"Why, it's himself again," cried Dyke excitedly. "Oh Joe, old man, you are better and no mistake. I haven't heard you speak like that since I went to old Morgenstern's.—Oh!"
"What is it?" cried Emson.
"I'm not quite awake yet. Yes I am, but I forgot that he was here, and about the diamonds; and—Joe, Joe, old chap, I don't believe precious stones ever did so much good before."
"Don't talk about them, boy," said Emson, holding his brother's hand tightly in his. "But I do seem as if a terrible load had been taken off body and brain. I feel this morning that I shall see home again; and I have talked about going, but never felt that I should see it till now."
"Then hooray for being rich! But, I say!"
"What?"
"Suppose any one one should come and rob us now."
Emson laughed aloud.
"The first trouble that attends wealth, little un. There, we've borne sorrow and disappointment like men."
"Man and boy, Joe."
"Like men, Dyke, for you have been a better man than I. Now then, we'll bear prosperity, please God, as patiently and well."
"Why, of course," cried Dyke; "but what did you do with the jolly old stones?"
"Put them in your bowl, and then in the case. Now see that the breakfast is got ready. I'm far better, but I feel too weak to help."
"Ah, but you won't long, if you go on like this," cried Dyke, dressing hurriedly, and beginning to have his morning wash in the bucket. "I say Joe, though, let's have some luxuries, now, as soon as we can. What do you say to a wash-hand basin?"
"Oh yes, we'll have that."
"And a sponge? Here, I say: I wonder whether old Morningstar has got any sponges: we'll buy one. New boots, too: mine are getting like Paddy's ride in the sedan-chair; I'm on the ground."
"All in good time, little un; all in good time: the first thing now is breakfast for our good old visitor."
"Ah, we'll have another spoonful of coffee in the pot this morning, Joe."
The old trader met them at breakfast and smiled as he shook hands.
"Ach ten!" he cried, "but you haf geschlafen wohl, mein vrient. Der beace of mind is a goot ding. You are besser. You need not speak, for your eyes are delling me all der dime what dey dink, bube."
"I'm sure he's better," said Dyke eagerly.
"Und he vill zoon be guite himselfs again. I zee you half been do mein oxen, Van Dyke."
"Oh yes, I had a look at them; they were feeding well."
"Ja; die poys dell me zo. Now I go do ask you do let me shday dill do-morrow, und den die peasts vill pe rested, und I go on again."
"Don't hurry, Herr Morgenstern," said Emson. "You and I must have a long talk about—about—"
"Die shdones? Nein, mein good vrient, you go do zay you must share zom mid me, but I zhall dake none. Look at me: I am zeventy jahrs alt, und I have blenty do leave my old vomans ven I die, zo should I dake what vill do you zo much good?"
"But we owe everything to you."
"Nein. It ist not zo. You have work hart, und you have got your goot dimes ad last. You keep vot you haf found. I zhall dake noding bood die hant of mein vrients."
"Oh, but you ought to have a good share, Herr Morgenstern," cried Dyke.
"Ach ten! what for you go shpeak like dot, you bube. You wand to make me gross, und get in a big passion. Tunder! No, I vill dot dake von shingle shdone. You shpeak again, I go away in a gross anger. Aha! you see, mein vrient Yoseph, I zoon zed die dot imbudend bube, who go to shpoil my breakfass. I do not wand my breakfass shpoil. You oondershtan. You say diamont again, I gall my poys, und inspan und go away."
He frowned, as if he meant all he said, went on eating fiercely for a few moments, and then with his mouth full:
"I have blenty," he cried, "und I am glad you have blendy, doo. Now, von vort, von leedle vort, und I haf done. You dake a long shdocking und pud die shdones in, and den you vind all you gan. You make mooch as you gan before die beoble gom. It is got to be know dot dere are blenty diamonts in der veldt, und tousands und tousands gom to vind. Vell, you are virst; you pick oop all you gan pefore dey gom, und nopody know, for you shoot oop your mouth and hold your dongue. Wise man don't cry 'Look here!' when he vind. He go und vind again, eh? Dot is all, und I have enshoy der bess breakfass I effer vas haf."
"But, really, Morgenstern."
"Oof! I am going to get in soch a big passion!" roared the old man furiously. "I gom here und vind you all down in die doomps. I gif you vizzick do make you shdrong, und I dell you you are ridge mans; und now you vill not led me haf any beace. I haf not mooch hair left upon mein het: do you vant me to dear it all oud; zo as mein old vomans zhall nod know me when I go pack?"
"No, no, no; but—"
"Nod anoder vort. I am going to shmoke mein bibe.—Ah, you bube, Van Dyke, you laugh pecause I preak him last night! You dink I haf nod god anoder? Ha, ha! I haf god zigs, und one made of wood zo as he gannod preak.—Now, mein tear vrient Yoseph Emzon, led me rest und enshoy myself.—You bube, go und dell dot plack vomans do gook me a goot tinner. I zhall go und shmoke mein bibe und shdudy close long, shdupid-looking pirts, und you gan both gom und dalk do me."
Old Morgenstern had his own way, sitting about in different parts of the farm where there were suitable resting-places, and longest in the chasm of the granite by the water spring in the kopje.
"So dis vas a vavoride blace of yours, eh, bube?" he said, as he sat and smoked in the shade.
"Yes; it is so nice, and moist, and cool."
"Ja, zo. You are nod a shtupid poy at all. Bood look here, dot vos a goot tinner: und I enshoy him mooch pecause I shall nod ged anoder dill I go pack to mein old vomans. Now I do nod dink you and der pig bruder vill shdop ferry long at Kopfontein. You will go pack to Angleland."
"Oh yes, some day, of course," said Dyke.
"Ja, zo. When you haf vound blenty of shdones. When you go pack, you vill nod dake dot voman?"
"Oh no! Poor old Tanta Sal; we shall be sorry to leave her behind."
"Den you do nod go to leave her pehind. You shall gom py me to go home.—Ah, heim! mein vaterland! I zhall neffer go pack to her, bube: I am doo alt und dick. I shall go vrom here do der great vaterland—do Himmel, I hope. Bood you shall bring Tanta Sal to alt Oom Morgenstern. My alt vomans shall pe fery goot to her, und she shall gook tinners, und help. Bood she vill haf to vear more glothes. Mein alt voman vill nod led her go apout like dot."
The next morning that plan regarding Tanta Sal's future was ratified, subject to the woman's agreement, and Emson thought that as they would go very slowly, he might be able to sit upon his horse, and ride with old Morgenstern for a few miles on his long round.
The old man beamed with satisfaction, and Emson and Dyke mounted, and walked their horses, one on each side of the wagon-box, where the old fellow sat holding his big whip.
They went to the first water, where the oxen were refreshed, a good six miles from Kopfontein, and then departed, the old man blessing them both in patriarchal manner, ending by kissing Dyke on each cheek.
"Dill we meed again, mein sohn," he said, and the great team of oxen slowly moved away, guided by the two Kaffir boys.
Emson and Dyke sat watching the wagon for some time, but the old man did not look back, and as Dyke sat gazing, he said to himself:
"I suppose it is the German custom. It seems queer to me, but I don't think I minded it so much just then."
"What are you thinking about, little un?" said Emson huskily.
"That old Morgenstern must be a very good old man. I wish he wouldn't kiss me, all the same, and make me laugh at his ways."
"It is only at his words and looks, Dyke. God bless him! We neither of us smile at him in our hearts."
The sun was setting as they walked their horses up toward the shabby-looking corrugated iron buildings; but now, in the evening light, everything seemed glorified, and they drew rein to look around, neither speaking for some time.
It was Dyke who broke the silence.
"You are tired out and done up, Joe," he said. "Let's get in, so that you can have some tea, and lie down and rest."
Emson started from his reverie, and there was a bright light in his eyes, a smile upon his lip, which made Dyke's heart leap with pleasure, while, when he spoke, his words sounded almost as they did of old.
"Tired, little un," he said, "and so stiff that you'll have to help me off the horse; but it is the good, honest weariness that makes rest one of the greatest pleasures of life. Look here, old chap, I feel as if I am going to be a man again."
He held out his hand, which Dyke caught and gripped without a word, listening as his brother went on.
"We've found wealth, little un, and I suppose that is good, but it seems to me like nothing compared to health and strength. One wants to have been pulled down very low to know what he is worth."
Dyke said nothing, but sat looking round him still at the wide veldt, and skies one scene of glory, as the sun illumined the great granite kopje, and seemed to crown it with rays of gold.
"Joe, old chap," he said at last, "I used to sit over there and sulk, and hate the hot old place and everything here, but—I don't think I shall like to leave it after all."
"The time for leaving has not come yet, boy," said Emson quietly. "We shall see. At present it is home."
It was three years later when they rode away, with their wagon lightly laden with the curiosities they wished to take back. The stones they had collected were safely there before, sent home from time to time.
For old Morgenstern had prophesied correctly. The news had spread fast enough, and by degrees the country was overrun, and a busy city sprang up not many miles away. They saw it with sorrow, certainly not from sordid motives—for within three months of the night when the old man visited Kopfontein, Dyke and his brother had picked up here and there all they cared to seek—but from a liking for the quiet life and their home on the veldt.
But as it grew more and more changed, the time seemed to draw nearer for saying good-bye to the little farm, where, from old associations, they still bred ostriches, and with far better fortune, leading a simple life, tended by Tanta Sal and a Kaffir whom they found that they could trust.
At last the time came.
"Home, little un?" said Emson laconically.
"Yes: Old England now," said the great strapping fellow six feet high. "Everything has changed, and I don't like the people who come always hanging about."
So they rode away one day, with Duke and the Kaffir at the head of the team, and Tanta Sal seated in the wagon-box behind, smiling and happy at the thought of the change, and giving the two young lions in their cage a scrap from time to time.
The homeward-bound pilgrims reached old Morgenstern's farm, where they were warmly welcomed, Tanta Sal arriving just at the right time.
"Vor you see we are gedding ferry old beobles now, mein sohn," said Morgenstern; "und as I am a ridge man, I do not like to zee mein old vomans vork zo hart.—Aha! und zo yo dake die gubs mit you?"
"Yes," said Dyke, "we are going to try and get them to England as a present for the Zoo."
"Zo!" said the old man.
Tanta Sal smiled contentedly when they rode off, a week later. She had no compunction about staying, while the Kaffir man was to come back with the empty wagon and team when the pilgrims reached the big town, from whence travelling was easy to the Cape.
And as the brothers mounted to go, Emson said:
"This is cutting the last string, little un?"
The stalwart "little un" nodded his head gravely.
"Yes, old chap," he said, "but the Kopfontein of the past is gone. It only lives in one's memory now."
They turned to look back—their wagon slowly crawling on in front, with the patient oxen, fat and sleek, following the black vorloper— homeward-bound; and as they sat in their saddles they could see the old German standing by the place with his wife, waving their hands, and Dyke almost fancied he could hear the old man saying, as he had said at parting:
"You are young und shdrong, und you haf die vorlt pefore you. Mein alt vomans und I are goming nearly do der endt. I do not zay dry und do goot mit vot you dake avay, vor I know you vill. Vonce more, mein sohns—goot-pye."
Just then Duke gave a sharp bark, as if to say, "Come on!"
"Right, old dog," cried Dyke. "Now, then, for home!"
THE END. |
|