<h2><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.<br/> THE BOY</h2>
<p>The river towards which Rachel headed, one of the mouths of the Umtavuna, was
much further off than it looked; it was, indeed, not less than a mile and a
half away. She had said that she feared nothing, and it was true, for
extraordinary courage was one of this child’s characteristics. She could
scarcely ever remember having felt afraid—for herself, except sometimes
of her father when he grew angry—or was it mad that he grew?—and
raged at her, threatening her with punishment in another world in reward for
her childish sins. Even then the sensation did not last long, because she could
not believe in that punishment which he so vividly imagined. So it came about
that now she had no fear when there was so much cause.</p>
<p>For this place was lonely; not a living creature could be seen. Moreover, a
dreadful hush brooded on the face of earth, and in the sky above; only far away
over the mountains the lightning flickered incessantly, as though a monster in
the skies were licking their precipices and pinnacles with a thousand tongues
of fire. Nothing stirred, not even an insect; every creature that drew breath
had hidden itself away until the coming terror was overpast.</p>
<p>The atmosphere was full of electricity struggling to be free. Although she knew
not what it was, Rachel felt it in her blood and brain. In some strange way it
affected her mind, opening windows there through which the eyes of her soul
looked out. She became aware of some new influence drawing near to her life; of
a sudden her budding womanhood burst into flower in her breast, shone on by an
unseen sun; she was no more a child. Her being quickened and acknowledged the
kinship of all things that are. That brooding, flame-threaded sky—she was
a part of it, the earth she trod, it was a part of her; the Mind that caused
the stars to roll and her to live, dwelt in her bosom, and like a babe she
nestled within the arm of its almighty will.</p>
<p>Now, as in a dream, Rachel descended the steep, rock-strewn banks of the dry
branch of the river-bed, wending her way between the boulders and noting that
rotten weeds and peeled brushwood rested against the stems of the mimosa thorns
which grew there, tokens which told her that here in times of flood the
water flowed. Well, there was little enough of it now, only a pool or two to
form a mirror for the lightning. In front of her lay the island where grew the
Cape gooseberries, or winter cherries as they are sometimes called, which she
came to seek. It was a low piece of ground, a quarter of a mile long, perhaps,
but in the centre of it were some great rocks and growing among the rocks,
trees, one of them higher than the rest. Beyond it ran the true river, even now
at the end of the dry season three or four hundred yards in breadth, though so
shallow that it could be forded by an ox-drawn waggon.</p>
<p>It was raining on the mountains yonder, raining in torrents poured from those
inky clouds, as it had done off and on for the past twenty-four hours, and
above their fire-laced bosom floated glorious-coloured masses of misty vapour,
enflamed in a thousand hues by the arrows of the sinking sun. Above her,
however, there was no sun, nothing but the curtain of cloud which grew
gradually from grey to black and minute by minute sank nearer to the earth.</p>
<p>Walking through the dry river-bed, Rachel reached the island which was the last
and highest of a line of similar islands that, separated from each other by
narrow breadths of water, lay like a chain, between the dry donga and the
river. Here she began to gather her gooseberries, picking the silvery,
octagonal pods from the green stems on which they grew. At first she opened
these pods, removing from each the yellow, sub-acid berry, thinking that thus
her basket would hold more, but presently abandoned that plan as it took too
much time. Also although the plants were plentiful enough, in that low and
curious light it was not easy to see them among the dense growth of reedy
vegetation.</p>
<p>While she was thus engaged she became aware of a low moaning noise and a
stirring of the air about her which caused the leaves and grasses to quiver
without bending. Then followed an ice-cold wind that grew in strength until it
blew keen and hard, ruffling the surface of the marshy pools. Still Rachel went
on with her task, for her basket was not more than half full, till presently
the heavens above her began to mutter and to groan, and drops of rain as large
as shillings fell upon her back and hands. Now she understood that it was time
for her to be going, and started to walk across the island—for at the
moment she was near its farther side—to reach the deep, rocky river-bed
or donga.</p>
<p>Before ever she came there, with awful suddenness and inconceivable fury, the
tempest burst. A hurricane of wind tore down the valley to the sea, and for a
few minutes the darkness became so dense that she could scarcely stumble
forward. Then there was light, a dreadful light; all the heavens seemed to take
fire, yes, and the earth, too; it was as though its last dread catastrophe had
fallen on the world.</p>
<p>Buffeted, breathless, Rachel at length reached the edge of the deep river-bed
that may have been fifty yards in width, and was about to step into it when she
became aware of two things. The first was a seething, roaring noise so loud
that it seemed to still even the bellowing of the thunder, and the next, now
seen, now lost, as the lightning pulsed and darkened, the figure of a youth, a
white youth, who had dismounted from a horse that remained near to but above
him, and stood, a gun in his hand, upon a rock at the farther side of the
donga.</p>
<p>He had seen her also and was shouting to her, of this she was sure, for
although the sound of his voice was lost in the tumult, she could perceive his
gesticulations when the lightning flared, and even the movement of his lips.
Wondering vaguely what a white boy could be doing in such a place and very glad
at the prospect of his company, Rachel began to advance towards him in short
rushes whenever the lightning showed her where to set her feet. She had made
two of these rushes when from the violence and character of his movements at
length she understood that he was trying to prevent her from coming further,
and paused confused.</p>
<p>Another instant and she knew why. Some hundreds of yards above her the river
bed took a turn, and suddenly round this turn, crested with foam, appeared a
wall of water in which trees and the carcases of animals were whirled along
like straws. The flood had come down from the mountains, and was advancing on
her more swiftly than a horse could gallop. Rachel ran forward a little way,
then understanding that she had no time to cross, stood bewildered, for the
fearful tumult of the elements and the dreadful roaring of that advancing wall
of foam overwhelmed her senses. The lightnings went out for a moment, then
began to play again with tenfold frequency and force. They struck upon the
nearing torrent, they struck in the dry bed before it, and leapt upwards from
the earth as though Titans and gods were hurling spears at one another.</p>
<p>In the lurid sheen of them she saw the lad leap from his rock and rush towards
her. A flash fell and split a boulder not thirty paces from him, causing him to
stagger, but he recovered himself and ran on. Now he was quite close, but the
water was closer still. It was coming in tiers or ledges, a thin sheet of foam
in front, then other layers laid upon it, each of them a few yards behind its
fellow. On the top ledge, in its very crest, was a bull buffalo, dead, but held
head on and down as though it were charging, and Rachel thought vaguely that
from the direction in which it came in a few moments its horns would strike
her. Another second and an arm was about her waist—she noted how white it
was where the sleeve was rolled up, dead white in the lightning—and she
was being dragged towards the shore that she had left. The first film of water
struck her and nearly washed her from her feet, but she was strong and active,
and the touch of that arm seemed to have given her back her wit, so she
regained them and splashed forward. Now the next tier took them both above the
knees, but for a moment shallowed so that they did not fall. The high bank was
scarce five yards away, and the wall of waters perhaps a score.</p>
<p>“Together for life or death!” said an English voice in her ear, and
the shout of it only reached her in a whisper.</p>
<p>The boy and the girl leapt forward like bucks. They reached the bank and
struggled up it. The hungry waters sprang at them like a living thing, grasping
their feet and legs as though with hands; a stick as it whirled by them struck
the lad upon the shoulder, and where it struck the clothes were rent away and
red blood appeared. Almost he fell, but this time it was Rachel who supported
him. Then one more struggle and they rolled exhausted on the ground just clear
of the lip of the racing flood.</p>
<p>Thus through tempest, threatened by the waters of death from which he snatched
her, and companioned by heaven’s lightnings, did Richard Darrien come
into the life of Rachel Dove.</p>
<p>Presently, having recovered their breath, they sat up and looked at each other
by lightning light, which was all there was. He was a handsome lad of about
seventeen, though short for his years; sturdy in build, very fair-skinned and
curiously enough with a singular resemblance to Rachel, except that his hair
was a few shades darker than hers. They had the same clear grey eyes, and the
same well-cut features; indeed seen together, most people would have thought
them brother and sister, and remarked upon their family likeness. Rachel spoke
the first.</p>
<p>“Who are you?” she shouted into his ear in one of the intervals of
darkness, “and why did you come here?”</p>
<p>“My name is Richard Darrien,” he answered at the top of his voice,
“and I don’t know why I came. I suppose something sent me to save
you.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” she replied with conviction, “something sent you. If
you had not come I should be dead, shouldn’t I? In glory, as my father
says.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know about glory, or what it is,” he remarked, after
thinking this saying over, “but you would have been rolling out to sea in
the flood water, like that buffalo, with not a whole bone in you, which
isn’t my idea of glory.”</p>
<p>“That’s because your father isn’t a missionary,” said
Rachel.</p>
<p>“No, he is an officer, naval officer, or at least he was, now he trades
and hunts. We are coming down from Natal. But what’s your name?”</p>
<p>“Rachel Dove.”</p>
<p>“Well, Rachel Dove—that’s very pretty, Rachel Dove, as you
would be if you were cleaner—it is going to rain presently. Is there any
place where we can shelter here?”</p>
<p>“I am as clean as you are,” she answered indignantly. “The
river muddied me, that’s all. You can go and shelter, I will stop and let
the rain wash me.”</p>
<p>“And die of the cold or be struck by lightning. Of course I knew you
weren’t dirty really. Is there any place?”</p>
<p>She nodded, mollified.</p>
<p>“I think I know one. Come,” and she stretched out her hand.</p>
<p>He took it, and thus hand in hand they made their way to the highest point of
the island where the trees grew, for here the rocks piled up together made a
kind of cave in which Rachel and her mother had sat for a little while when
they visited the place. As they groped their way towards it the lightning
blazed out and they saw a great jagged flash strike the tallest tree and
shatter it, causing some wild beast that had sheltered there to rush past them
snorting.</p>
<p>“That doesn’t look very safe,” said Richard halting,
“but come on, it isn’t likely to hit the same spot twice.”</p>
<p>“Hadn’t you better leave your gun?” she suggested, for all
this while that weapon had been slung to his back and she knew that lightning
has an affinity for iron.</p>
<p>“Certainly not,” he answered, “it is a new one which my
father gave me, and I won’t be parted from it.”</p>
<p>Then they went on and reached the little cave just as the rain broke over them
in earnest. As it chanced the place was dry, being so situated that all water
ran away from it. They crouched in it shivering, trying to cover themselves
with dead sticks and brushwood that had lodged here in the wet season when the
whole island was under water.</p>
<p>“It would be nice enough if only we had a fire,” said Rachel, her
teeth chattering as she spoke.</p>
<p>The lad Richard thought a while. Then he opened a leather case that hung on his
rifle sling and took from it a powder flask and flint and steel and some
tinder. Pouring a little powder on the damp tinder, he struck the flint until
at length a spark caught and fired the powder. The tinder caught also, though
reluctantly, and while Rachel blew on it, he felt round for dead leaves and
little sticks, some of which were coaxed into flame.</p>
<p>After this things were easy since fuel lay about in abundance, so that soon
they had a splendid fire burning in the mouth of the cave whence the smoke
escaped. Now they were able to warm and dry themselves, and as the heat entered
into their chilled bodies, their spirits rose. Indeed the contrast between this
snug hiding place and blazing fire of drift wood and the roaring tempest
without, conduced to cheerfulness in young people who had just narrowly escaped
from drowning.</p>
<p>“I am so hungry,” said Rachel, presently.</p>
<p>Again Richard began to search, and this time produced from the pocket of his
coat a long and thick strip of sun-dried meat.</p>
<p>“Can you eat biltong?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Of course,” she answered eagerly.</p>
<p>“Then you must cut it up,” he said, giving her the meat and his
knife. “My arm hurts me, I can’t.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” she exclaimed, “how selfish I am. I forgot about that
stick striking you. Let me see the place.”</p>
<p>He took off his coat and knelt down while she stood over him and examined his
wound by the light of the fire, to find that the left upper arm was bruised,
torn and bleeding. As it will be remembered that Rachel had no handkerchief,
she asked Richard for his, which she soaked in a pool of rain water just
outside the cave. Then, having washed the hurt thoroughly, she bandaged his arm
with the handkerchief and bade him put on his coat again, saying confidently
that he would be well in a few days.</p>
<p>“You are clever,” he remarked with admiration. “Who taught
you to bandage wounds?”</p>
<p>“My father always doctors the Kaffirs and I help him,” Rachel
answered, as, having stretched out her hands for the pouring rain to wash them,
she took the biltong and began to cut it in thin slices.</p>
<p>These she made him eat before she touched any herself, for she saw that the
loss of blood had weakened him. Indeed her own meal was a light one, since half
the strip of meat must, she declared, be put aside in case they should not be
able to get off the island. Then he saw why she had made him eat first and was
very angry with himself and her, but she only laughed at him and answered that
she had learned from the Kaffirs that men must be fed before women as they were
more important in the world.</p>
<p>“You mean more selfish,” he answered, contemplating this wise
little maid and her tiny portion of biltong, which she swallowed very slowly,
perhaps to pretend that her appetite was already satisfied with its
superabundance. Then he fell to imploring her to take the rest, saying that he
would be able to shoot some game in the morning, but she only shook her little
head and set her lips obstinately.</p>
<p>“Are you a hunter?” she asked to change the subject.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he answered with pride, “that is, almost. At any rate
I have shot eland, and an elephant, but no lions yet. I was following the spoor
of a lion just now, but it got up between the rocks and bolted away before I
could shoot. I think that it must have been after you.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” said Rachel. “There are some about here; I have
heard them roaring at night.”</p>
<p>“Then,” he went on, “while I was staring at you running
across this island, I heard the sound of the water and saw it rushing down the
donga, and saw too that you must be drowned, and—you know the
rest.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I know the rest,” she said, looking at him with shining eyes.
“You risked your life to save mine, and therefore,” she added with
quiet conviction, “it belongs to you.”</p>
<p>He stared at her and remarked simply:</p>
<p>“I wish it did. This morning I wished to kill a lion with my new
<i>roer</i>,” and he pointed to the heavy gun at his side, “above
everything else, but to-night I wish that your life belonged to me—above
anything else.”</p>
<p>Their eyes met, and child though she was, Rachel saw something in those of
Richard that caused her to turn her head.</p>
<p>“Where are you going?” she asked quickly.</p>
<p>“Back to my father’s farm in Graaf-Reinet, to sell the ivory. There
are three others besides my father, two Boers and one Englishman.”</p>
<p>“And I am going to Natal where you come from,” she answered,
“so I suppose that after to-night we shall never see each other again,
although my life does belong to you—that is if we escape.”</p>
<p>Just then the tempest which had lulled a little, came on again in fury,
accompanied by a hurricane of wind and deluge of rain, through which the
lightning blazed incessantly. The thunderclaps too were so loud and constant
that the sound of them, which shook the earth, made it impossible for Richard
and Rachel to hear each other speak. So they were silent perforce. Only Richard
rose and looked out of the cave, then turned and beckoned to his companion. She
came to him and watched, till suddenly a blinding sheet of flame lit up the
whole landscape. Then she saw what he was looking at, for now nearly all the
island, except that high part of it on which they stood, was under water,
hidden by a brown, seething torrent, that tore past them to the sea.</p>
<p>“If it rises much more, we shall be drowned,” he shouted in her
ear.</p>
<p>She nodded, then cried back:</p>
<p>“Let us say our prayers and get ready,” for it seemed to Rachel
that the “glory” of which her father spoke so often was nearer to
them than ever.</p>
<p>Then she drew him back into the cave and motioned to him to kneel beside her,
which he did bashfully enough, and for a while the two children, for they were
little more, remained thus with clasped hands and moving lips. Presently the
thunder lessened a little so that once more they could hear each other speak.</p>
<p>“What did you pray about?” he asked when they had risen from their
knees.</p>
<p>“I prayed that you might escape, and that my mother might not grieve for
me too much,” she answered simply. “And you?”</p>
<p>“I? Oh! the same—that you might escape. I did not pray for my
mother as she is dead, and I forgot about father.”</p>
<p>“Look, look!” exclaimed Rachel, pointing to the mouth of the cave.</p>
<p>He stared out at the darkness, and there, through the thin flames of the fire,
saw two great yellow shapes which appeared to be walking up and down and
glaring into the cave.</p>
<p>“Lions,” he gasped, snatching at his gun.</p>
<p>“Don’t shoot,” she cried, “you might make them angry.
Perhaps they only want to take refuge like ourselves. The fire will keep them
away.”</p>
<p>He nodded, then remembering that the charge and priming of his flint-lock
<i>roer</i> must be damp, hurriedly set to work by the help of Rachel to draw
it with the screw on the end of his ramrod, and this done, to reload with some
powder that he had already placed to dry on a flat stone near the fire. This
operation took five minutes or more. When at length it was finished, and the
lock reprimed with the dry powder, the two of them, Richard holding the
<i>roer</i>, crept to the mouth of the cave and looked out again.</p>
<p>The great storm was passing now, and the rain grew thinner, but from time to
time the lightning, no longer forked or chain-shaped, flared in wide sheets. By
its ghastly illumination they saw a strange sight. There on the island top the
two lions marched backwards and forwards as though they were in a cage, making
a kind of whimpering noise as they went, and staring round them uneasily.
Moreover, these were not alone, for gathered there were various other animals,
driven down by the flood from the islands above them, reed and water bucks, and
a great eland. Among these the lions walked without making the slightest effort
to attack them, nor did the antelopes, which stood sniffing and staring at the
torrent, take any notice of the lions, or attempt to escape.</p>
<p>“You are right,” said Richard, “they are all frightened, and
will not harm us, unless the water rises more, and they rush into the cave.
Come, make up the fire.”</p>
<p>They did so, and sat down on its further side, watching till, as nothing
happened, their dread of the lions passed away, and they began to talk again,
telling to each other the stories of their lives.</p>
<p>Richard Darrien, it seemed, had been in Africa about five years, his father
having emigrated there on the death of his mother, as he had nothing but the
half-pay of a retired naval captain, and he hoped to better his fortunes in a
new land. He had been granted a farm in the Graaf-Reinet district, but like
many other of the early settlers, met with misfortunes. Now, to make money, he
had taken to elephant-hunting, and with his partners was just returning from a
very successful expedition in the coast lands of Natal, at that time an almost
unexplored territory. His father had allowed Richard to accompany the party,
but when they got back, added the boy with sorrow, he was to be sent for two or
three years to the college at Capetown, since until then his father had not
been able to afford him the luxury of an education. Afterwards he wished him to
adopt a profession, but on this point he—Richard—had made up his
mind, although at present he said little about that. He would be a hunter, and
nothing else, until he grew too old to hunt, when he intended to take to
farming.</p>
<p>His story done, Rachel told him hers, to which he listened eagerly.</p>
<p>“Is your father mad?” he asked when she had finished.</p>
<p>“No,” she answered. “How dare you suggest it? He is only very
good; much better than anybody else.”</p>
<p>“Well, it seems to come to much the same thing, doesn’t it?”
said Richard, “for otherwise he would not have sent you to gather
gooseberries here with such a storm coming on.”</p>
<p>“Then why did your father send you to hunt lions with such a storm coming
on?” she asked.</p>
<p>“He didn’t send me. I came of myself; I said that I wanted to shoot
a buck, and finding the spoor of a lion I followed it. The waggons must be a
long way ahead now, for when I left them I returned to that kloof where I had
seen the buck. I don’t know how I shall overtake them again, and
certainly nobody will ever think of looking for me here, as after this rain
they can’t spoor the horse.”</p>
<p>“Supposing you don’t find it—I mean your
horse—tomorrow, what shall you do?” asked Rachel. “We
haven’t got any to lend you.”</p>
<p>“Walk and try to catch them up,” he replied.</p>
<p>“And if you can’t catch them up?”</p>
<p>“Come back to you, as the wild Kaffirs ahead would kill me if I went on
alone.”</p>
<p>“Oh! But what would your father think?”</p>
<p>“He would think there was one boy the less, that’s all, and be
sorry for a while. People often vanish in Africa where there are so many lions
and savages.”</p>
<p>Rachel reflected a while, then finding the subject difficult, suggested that he
should find out what their own particular lions were doing. So Richard went to
look, and reported that the storm had ceased, and that by the moonlight he
could see no lions or any other animals, so he thought that they must have gone
away somewhere. The flood waters also appeared to be running down. Comforted by
this intelligence Rachel piled on the fire nearly all the wood that remained to
them. Then they sat down again side by side, and tried to continue their
conversation. By degrees it drooped, however, and the end of it was that
presently this pair were fast asleep in each other’s arms.</p>
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