<h2><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.<br/> THE TAKING OF NOIE</h2>
<p>Presently Mrs. Dove, who seemed to have quite recovered from her curious
seizure, went to bed.</p>
<p>“I don’t like it, father,” said Rachel when the door had
closed behind her. “Of course it is contrary to experience and all that,
but I believe that mother is fore-sighted.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense, dear, nonsense,” said her father. “It is her
Scotch superstition, that is all. We have been married for five-and-twenty
years now, and I have heard this sort of thing again and again, but although we
have lived in wild places where anything might happen to us, nothing out of the
way ever has happened; in fact, we have always been most mercifully
preserved.”</p>
<p>“That’s true, father, still I am not sure; perhaps because I am
rather that way myself, sometimes. Thus I <i>know</i> that she is right about
me; no harm will happen to me, at least no permanent harm. I feel that I shall
live out my life, as I feel something else.”</p>
<p>“What else, Rachel?”</p>
<p>“Do you remember the lad, Richard Darrien?” she asked, colouring a
little.</p>
<p>“What? The boy who was with you that night on the island? Yes, I remember
him, although I have not thought of him for years.”</p>
<p>“Well, I feel that I shall see him again.”</p>
<p> Mr. Dove laughed. “Is that all?” he said. “If he is
still alive and in Africa, it wouldn’t be very wonderful if you did,
would it? And at any rate, of course, you will one day when we all cease to be
alive. Really,” he added with irritation, “there are enough bothers
in life without rubbish of this kind, which comes from living among savages and
absorbing their ideas. I am beginning to think that I shall have to give way
and leave Africa, though it will break my heart just when, after all the
striving, my efforts are being crowned with success.”</p>
<p>“I have always told you, father, that I don’t want to leave Africa,
still, there is mother to be considered. Her health is not what it was.”</p>
<p>“Well,” he said impatiently, “I will talk to her and weigh
the thing. Perhaps I shall receive guidance, though for my part I cannot see
what it matters. We’ve got to die some time, and if necessary I prefer
that it should be while doing my duty. ‘Take no thought for the morrow,
sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof,’ has always been my motto,
who am content with what it pleases Providence to send me.”</p>
<p>Then Rachel, seeing no use in continuing the conversation, bade him good-night,
and went to look for Noie, only to discover that she was not in the house. This
disturbed her very much, although it occurred to her that she might possibly be
with friends in the village, hiding till she was sure the Zulu embassy had
gone. So she went to bed without troubling her father.</p>
<p>At daybreak next morning she rose, not having slept very well, and went out to
look for the girl, without success, for no one had heard or seen anything of
her. As she was returning to the house, however, she met a solitary Zulu, a
dignified middle-aged man, whom she thought she recognised as one of the
embassy, although of this she could not be sure, as she had only seen these
people in the moonlight. The man, who was quite unarmed, except for a kerry
which he carried, crouched down on catching sight of her in token of respect.
As she approached he rose, and gave her the royal salute. Then she was sure.</p>
<p>“Speak,” she said.</p>
<p>“Inkosazana,” he answered humbly, “be not angry with me, I am
Tamboosa, one of the King’s indunas. You saw me with the others last
night.”</p>
<p>“I saw you.”</p>
<p>“Inkosazana, there has been dwelling with you one Noie, the daughter of
Seyapi the wizard, who with all his house was slain at this place by order of
the King. She also should have been slain, but we have learned that you called
down lightning from Heaven, and that with it you slew the soldier who had run
her down, slew him and burned him up, as you had the right to do, and took the
girl to be your slave, as you had the right to do.”</p>
<p>“Speak on,” said Rachel, showing none of the surprise which she
felt.</p>
<p>“Inkosazana, we know that you have come to love this girl. Therefore,
yesterday before we spoke with you we seized her as we were commanded, and hid
her away, awaiting your answer to our message. Had you consented to visit the
King at his Great Place, we would have let her go. But as you did not consent
my companions have taken her to the King.”</p>
<p>“An ill deed. What more, Tamboosa?”</p>
<p>“This; the King says by my mouth—Let the Inkosazana come and
command, and her servant Noie shall go free and unharmed, for is she not a dog
in her hut? But if she comes not and at once, then the girl dies.”</p>
<p>“How know I that this tale is true, Tamboosa?” asked Rachel,
controlling herself with an effort, for she loved Noie dearly.</p>
<p>The man turned towards some bushes that grew at a distance of about twenty
paces, and cried: “Come hither.”</p>
<p>Thereon from among the bushes where she lay hidden, rose a little maid of about
fourteen, whom Rachel knew well as a girl that Noie often took with her to
carry baskets and other things.</p>
<p>“Tell now the tale of the taking of Noie and deliver the message that she
gave to you,” commanded Tamboosa.</p>
<p>Thereon the trembling child began, and after the native fashion, suppressing no
detail or circumstance, however small, narrated how the Zulus had surprised her
and Noie while they were gathering flowers, and having bound their arms, had
caused them to be hurried away unseen to some dense bush about four miles off.
Here they had been kept hidden till in the night the embassy returned. Then
they had spoken with Noie, who in the end called her and gave her a message.
This was the message: “Say to the Inkosazana that the Zulus have caught
me, and are taking me to Dingaan the King. Say that they declare that if she is
pleased to come and speak the word, I shall be set free unharmed, that is, if
she comes at once. But if she does not come, then I shall be killed. Say to her
that I do not ask that she should come who am ready to die, and that though I
believe that no harm will happen to her in Zululand, I think that she had
better not come. Say that, living or dead, I love her.”</p>
<p>Then the maid described how the embassy went on with Noie, leaving her in the
charge of the man Tamboosa, who at the first break of dawn brought her back to
Ramah, and made her hide in the bush.</p>
<p>Now Rachel had no more doubts. Clearly the tale was true, and the question
was—what must be done? She thought a while, then bade Tamboosa and the
child to follow her to the mission-house. On the stoep she found her father and
mother sitting in the sun and drinking coffee, after the South African fashion.</p>
<p>“What is it?” asked Mr. Dove, looking at the man anxiously.</p>
<p>Rachel ordered him to repeat his story, and this he did, addressing Rachel
alone, for of her father and mother he would take no notice. When he had done
the child told her tale also.</p>
<p>“Go now, and wait without,” said Rachel, when it was finished.</p>
<p>“Inkosazana, I go,” answered the man, “but if it pleases you
to save your servant, know that you must come swiftly. If you are not across
the Tugela by sunset this night, word will be passed to the King, and she dies
at once. Know also that you must come alone with me, for if any, white or
black, accompany you, they will be killed.”</p>
<p>“Now,” said Rachel when the three of them were left alone,
“now what is to be done?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Dove shook her head helplessly, and looked at her husband, who broke into
a tirade against the Zulus, their superstitions, cruelties, customs, and
everything that was theirs, and ended by declaring that it was of course
utterly impossible that Rachel should go upon such a mad errand, and thus place
herself in the power of savages.</p>
<p>“But, father,” she said when he had done, “do you understand
that you are pronouncing Noie’s death sentence? If you were in my place,
would you not go?”</p>
<p>“Of course I would. In fact I propose to do so as it is. No doubt Dingaan
will listen to me.”</p>
<p>“You mean that Dingaan will kill you. Did you not hear what that man
Tamboosa said? Father, you must not go.”</p>
<p>“No, John,” broke in Mrs. Dove, “Rachel is right, you must
not go, for you would never come back again. Also, how can you be so cruel as
to think of leaving me here alone?”</p>
<p>“Then I suppose that we must abandon that poor girl to her fate,”
exclaimed Mr. Dove.</p>
<p>“How can you suppose anything so merciless, father, when it is in my
power to save her?” asked Rachel. “If I let those horrible Zulus
kill her I shall never be happy again all my life.”</p>
<p>“And what if the horrible Zulus kill you?”</p>
<p>“They will not kill me, father; mother knows they will not, and so do I.
But as they have got this madness into their heads, I am sure that if I do not
go they will send an impi here to kill everybody else, and take me prisoner.
The kidnapping of Noie is only a first move. It is one of two things: either I
must visit Zululand, save Noie, and play my part there as best I can, or we
must desert Noie, and all leave this place at once, tomorrow if possible. But
then, as I told you, I shall never forgive myself, especially as I am not in
the least afraid of the Zulus.”</p>
<p>“It is true that God can protect you as much in Zululand as He can
here,” replied Mr. Dove, beginning to weaken in face of this desperate
alternative.</p>
<p>“Of course, father, but if I go to Zululand I want you and mother to trek
to Durban, and remain there till I return.”</p>
<p>“Why, Rachel? It is absurd.”</p>
<p>“Because I do not think that you are safe here, and it is not at all
absurd,” she answered stubbornly. “These people choose to believe
that I am in some way in bondage to you; you remember all their talk about the
heavens and the cloud. Of course it may mean nothing, but you will be much
better in Durban for a while, where you can take to the water if
necessary.”</p>
<p>Now Mr. Dove’s obstinacy asserted itself. He refused to entertain any
such idea, giving reason after reason why he should not do so. Thus for another
half hour the argument raged till at length a compromise was arrived at, as
usual in such cases, not of too satisfactory an order. Rachel was to be allowed
to undertake her mission on behalf of Noie, and her parents were to remain at
Ramah. On her return, which they hoped would be within a week or eight days,
the question of the abandonment of the mission was to be settled by the help of
the experience she had gained. To this arrangement, then, they agreed,
reluctantly enough all of them, in order to save Noie’s life, and for no
other reason.</p>
<p>The momentous decision once taken, in half an hour Rachel was ready for her
journey, which she determined she would make upon her own horse, a grey mare
that she had ridden for a long while, and could rely on in every way. The white
riding-ox that Dingaan had sent as a present was also to accompany her, to
carry her spare garments and other articles packed in skin bags, such as
coffee, sugar and a few medicines, and to serve as a remount in case anything
should happen to the horse. When it was laden Rachel sent for the Zulu,
Tamboosa, and, pointing to the ox, said:</p>
<p>“I come to visit Dingaan the king, and to claim my servant. Lead the
beast on, I will overtake you presently.”</p>
<p>The man saluted and began to <i>bonga</i>, that is, to give her titles of
praise, but she cut him short with a wave of her hand, and he departed leading
the ox.</p>
<p>Now while Mr. Dove saw to the saddling of the horses, for he was to ride with
her as far as the Tugela, Rachel went to bid farewell to her mother. She found
her by herself in the sitting-room, seated at an open window, and looking out
sadly towards the sea.</p>
<p>“I am quite ready, dear,” she said in a cheerful voice.
“Don’t look so sad, I shall be back again in a week with
Noie.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered Mrs. Dove, “I think that you and Noie will
come back safely, but—” and she paused.</p>
<p>“But what, mother?”</p>
<p>“Oh! I don’t know. I am very much oppressed, my heart is heavy in
me. I hate parting with you, Rachel. Remember we have never been separated
since you were born.”</p>
<p>Her daughter looked at her, and was filled with grief and compunction.</p>
<p>“Mother,” she said, “if you feel like that—well, I love
Noie, but after all you are more to me than Noie, and if you wish I will give
up this business and stop with you. It is very terrible, but it can’t be
helped; Noie will understand, poor thing,” and her eyes filled with tears
at the thought of the girl’s dreadful fate.</p>
<p>“No, Rachel, somehow I think it best that you should go, not only for
Noie’s sake, but for your own. If your father would leave here to-day or
to-morrow, as you suggested, it might be otherwise, but he won’t do that,
so it is no use talking of it. Let us hope for the best.”</p>
<p>“As you wish, mother.”</p>
<p>“Now, dear, kiss me and go. I hear your father calling you; and, Rachel,
if we should not meet again in this world, I know you won’t forget me, or
that there is another where we shall. I did not want to frighten you with my
fancies, which come from my not being well. Goodbye, my love, good-bye. God be
with you, and make you happy, always—always.”</p>
<p>Then Rachel kissed her in silence, for she could not trust herself to speak,
and turning, left the room whence her mother watched her go, also in silence.
In another minute she was mounted, and, accompanied by her father, riding on
the road along which Tamboosa had led the white ox.</p>
<p>Presently they overtook him, whereon he stopped, and looking at Mr. Dove, said:</p>
<p>“Inkosazana, the King’s orders are that none should accompany you
into Zululand.”</p>
<p>“Be silent,” answered Rachel, proudly. “He rides with me as
far as the river bank.”</p>
<p>Then they went on, and Rachel was relieved to find that whatever might have
been her mother’s mood, that of her father was fairly cheerful. Indeed,
his mind was so occupied with the details and object of her journey that he
quite forgot its dangers.</p>
<p>Two hours’ steady riding brought them to the ford of the Tugela river,
across which lay Zululand. On the hills beyond it they could see a number of
Kaffirs watching, who on catching sight of Rachel, ran down to the river and
entered it, shouting and beating the water with their sticks, as she guessed,
to scare away any crocodiles that might be lurking there.</p>
<p>Now that the moment of separation had come, Mr. Dove grew loth to part with his
daughter, and again suggested to Tamboosa that he should accompany her to
Dingaan’s Great Place.</p>
<p>“If you set a foot across that river, Praying Man,” answered the
induna grimly, “you shall die; look, there are the spears that will kill
you.”</p>
<p>As he spoke he pointed to the crest of the opposing hill over which, running
swiftly in ordered companies, now appeared a Zulu regiment who carried large
white shields and wore white plumes rising from their head rings.</p>
<p>“It is the escort of the Inkosazana,” he added. “Do you think
that she can take hurt among so many? And do you think, if you dare to disobey
the words of Dingaan, that you can escape so many? Go back now, lest they
should come over and kill you where you are.”</p>
<p>Then, seeing that both argument and resistance were useless, and that Tamboosa
would brook no delay, Mr. Dove hurriedly embraced his daughter in farewell.
Indeed, Rachel was glad that there was no time for words, for this parting was
more terrible to her than she cared to own, and she feared lest she should
break down before the Zulu who was watching her, and thereby be lowered in his
eyes and in those of his people.</p>
<p>It was over and done. She had entered the water, riding her grey mare while
Tamboosa led the white ox at her side. Presently she looked back, and saw her
father kneeling in prayer upon the bank.</p>
<p>“What does the man?” asked Tamboosa, uneasily. “Is he
bewitching us?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” she answered, “he prays to the Heavens for us.”</p>
<p>On they went between the two lines of natives, who ceased their beating of the
water, and were silent as she passed. The river was shallow, and they crossed
it with ease. By now the regiment was gathered on its further bank, two
thousand men or more, brought hither to do honour to this white girl in whom
they chose to consider that the guardian spirit of their people was incarnate.
Contemplating them, Rachel wondered how it came about that they should be thus
prepared for her advent. The answer rose in her mind. If she had refused to
visit Zululand, it was their mission to fetch her. It was wise, therefore, that
she had come of her own will.</p>
<p>Forward she rode, a striking figure in her long white cloak, down which her
bright hair hung, sitting very proud and upright on her horse, without a sign
of doubt or fear. As she approached, the captains of the regiment ran forward
to meet her with lifted shield and crouching bodies.</p>
<p>“Hail!” cried their leader. “In the name of the Great
Elephant, of Dingaan the King, hail to thee, Princess of the Heavens, Holder of
the Spirit of Nomkubulwana.”</p>
<p>Rachel rode on, taking no notice, marvelling who Nomkubulwana, whose spirit she
was supposed to enshrine, might be. Afterwards she discovered that it was only
another name for the Inkosazana-y-Zoola, that mysterious white ghost believed
by this people to control their destinies, with whom it had pleased them to
identify her. As her horse left the wide river and set foot upon dry land,
every man of the two thousand soldiers, who were watching, as it seemed to her,
with wonder and awe, began to beat his ox-hide shield with the handle of his
spear. They beat very softly at first, producing a sound like the distant
murmur of the sea, then harder and harder till its volume grew to a mighty
roar, impossible to describe, a sound like the sound of thunder that echoed
along the water and from hill to hill. The mighty noise sank and died away as
it had begun, and for a moment there was silence. Then at some signal every
spear flashed aloft in the sunlight, and from every throat came the royal
salute—<i>Bayète</i>. It was a tremendous and most imposing welcome, so
tremendous that Rachel could no longer doubt that this people regarded her as a
being apart, and above the other white folk whom they knew.</p>
<p>At the time, however, she had little space for such thoughts, since the mare
she rode, terrified by the tumult, bucked and shied so violently that she could
scarcely keep her seat. She was a good rider, which was fortunate for her,
since, had she been ignominiously thrown upon such an occasion, her prestige
must have suffered, if indeed it were not destroyed. As it proved, it was
greatly enhanced by this accident. Many of the Zulus of that day had never even
seen a horse, which was considered by all of them to be a dangerous if not a
magical beast. That a woman could remain seated on such a wild animal when it
sprang into the air, and swerved from side to side, struck them, therefore, as
something marvellous and out of experience, a proof indeed that she was not as
others are.</p>
<p>She quieted the mare, and rode on between the white-shielded ranks, who, their
greeting finished, remained absolutely still like bronze statues watching her
with wondering eyes. When at length they were passed, the captains and a guard
of about fifty men ran ahead of her. Then she came, and after her Tamboosa,
leading the white ox, followed by another guard, which in turn was followed by
the entire regiment. Thus royally escorted, asking no questions, and speaking
no word, did Rachel make her entry into Zululand. Only in her heart she
wondered whither she was going, and how that strange journey would end,
wondered, too, how it would fare with her father and her mother till she
returned to them.</p>
<p>Well might she wonder.</p>
<p>When she had ridden thus for about two hours an incident occurred which showed
her how great, and indeed how dreadful was the eminence on which she had been
set among these people. Suddenly some cattle, frightened by the approach of the
impi, rushed through it towards their kraal, and a bull that was with them,
seeing this unaccustomed apparition of a white woman mounted on a strange
animal, put down its head and charged her furiously. She saw it coming, and by
pulling the mare on to its haunches, avoided its rush. Now at the time she was
riding on a path which ran along the edge of a little rock-strewn donga not
more than eight or ten feet deep, but steep-sided. Into this donga the bull,
which had shut its eyes to charge after the fashion of its kind, plunged
headlong, and as it chanced struck its horns against a stone, twisting and
dislocating the neck, so that it lay there still and dead.</p>
<p>When the Zulus saw what had happened they uttered a long-drawn <i>Ow-w</i> of
amazement, for had not the beast dared to attack the White Spirit, and had not
the Spirit rewarded it with instant death? Then a captain made a motion with
his hand and instantly men sprang upon the remaining cattle, four or five of
them that were following the bull, and despatched them with assegais. Before
Rachel could interfere they were pierced with a hundred wounds. Now there was a
little pause, while the carcases of the beasts were dragged out of her path,
and the bloodstains covered from her eyes with fresh earth. Just as this task
was finished there appeared, scrambling up the donga, and followed by some
men, a fat and hideous-looking woman, with fish bladders in her hair, and
snake-skins tied about her, who, from her costume, Rachel knew at once must be
an <i>Isanuzi</i> or witch-doctoress. Evidently she was in a fury, as might be
seen by the workings of her face, and the extraordinary swiftness with which
she moved notwithstanding her years and bulk.</p>
<p>“Who has dared to kill my cattle?” she screamed. “Is it thou
whom men name Nomkubulwana?”</p>
<p>“Woman,” answered Rachel quietly, “the Heavens killed the
bull which would have hurt me. For the rest, ask of the captains of the
King.”</p>
<p>The witch-doctoress glanced at the dead bull which lay in the donga, its head
twisted up in an unnatural fashion at right angles to the body, and for a
moment seemed afraid. Then her rage at the loss of her herd broke out afresh,
for she was a person in authority, one accustomed to be feared because of her
black arts and her office.</p>
<p>“When the Inkosazana is seen in Zululand,” she gasped, “death
walks with her. There is the token of it,” and she pointed to the dead
cattle. “So it has ever been and so shall it ever be. Red is thy road
through life, White One. Go back, go back now to thine own kraal, and see
whether or no my words are true,” and springing at the horse she seized
it by the bridle as though she would drag it round.</p>
<p>Now in her hand Rachel held a little rod of white rhinoceros horn which she
used as a riding whip, and with this rod she pointed at the woman, meaning that
some of those with her should cause her to loose the bridle. Too late she
remembered that in this savage land such a motion when made by the King or one
in supreme command, had another dreadful interpretation—death without
pity or reprieve.</p>
<p>In an instant, before she could interfere, before she could speak, the
witch-doctoress lay dead upon the carcase of the dead bull.</p>
<p>“What of the others, Queen, what of the others?” asked the chief of
the slayers, bending low before her, and pointing with his spear to the
attendants of the witch-doctoress, who fled aghast. “Do they join this
evil-doer who dared to lift her hand against thee?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” she answered in a low voice, for horror had made her almost
dumb. “I give them life. Forward.”</p>
<p>“She gives them life!” shouted the praisers about her. “The
Bearer of life and death gives life to the children of the evil-doer,”
and as the great cavalcade marched forward, company after company took up these
words and sang them as a song.</p>
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