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"Rather. I've got a theory that your clothes helped to save you. You were saying, Hesketh, that the only one of those who came to grief here and recovered consciousness was a Hottentot. Well, he would have had clothes on, and the Kaffirs wouldn't."
"Something in that, may be," answered the old man.
A little farther on he picked up another of the tiny arrows. This one was sticking in the ground.
"The one I dodged," he said. "Come on further."
He led the way. Suddenly d.i.c.k Selmes gave a start.
"What's that?" he said. "Ugh!"
"The mystery," answered Greenoak.
The monkey-like shape lying there looked more hideous and horrible in death, if possible than when it skipped along the tree-tops.
"But what is it?"
"A survivor of the original Bushmen who lived among the holes and caves of these mountains. He adopted this method of setting up a scare in order to have the run of this place unmolested. You see, if he went on the ground he'd leave spoor, and he knew that--hence the tree dodge."
"How is it we never found any of these arrows?" said old Hesketh.
"Probably you never thought of looking for them."
"No more we did."
"You see," explained Greenoak, "when you were spinning that yarn about the kloof it brought back to my mind one similar case I'd known of the kind, and I began to put two and two together. Well, the murdering little beast has only got what he deserved, but it'll save bother if we keep our mouths shut, all the same."
"But how do you know there are no more of 'em, Greenoak?" said d.i.c.k Selmes.
"I'm sure there aren't. This one is as old as Methuselah. He'd be the only one. You can use Slaang Kloof again, Hesketh."
CHAPTER FIVE.
HAZEL.
"A niece of mine's coming up to-morrow to stay a bit," announced old Hesketh, a few days later.
"Oh, but--I say, won't we rather be making a crowd?" protested d.i.c.k.
"Had no end of a jolly time, you know, Mr Hesketh; but--er--wouldn't put you out for the world."
"Don't you bother your head about that, young buffalo hunter," answered the old man. "You're not crowding me any. I'll tell you when you are.
So you've had a good time, eh?"
"Splendid," said d.i.c.k, heartily. "The shoot just is good, and as for this air, why, I never felt so fit in my life."
Old Hesketh nodded, and surveyed the speaker approvingly. The latter certainly looked as he had declared he felt--fit. His face, tanned a fine brown, was the picture of health. Out all day and every day, often having to work hard for his sport, whether for hours among the cliffs and crags stalking klip-springers or reebok, or toiling up to some high ridge on the chance of getting a shot or two into the herd of baboons which usually frequented the other side, or one or other of the varied forms of sport the place afforded, d.i.c.k Selmes had attained the pink of hard condition.
"Well, then, don't be in a hurry to run away," rejoined old Hesketh.
"Though I dare say it's slow enough of evenings with a couple of old fellows like me and Greenoak."
"Thanks," remarked the latter drily, and d.i.c.k spluttered.
"Some one young about the place'll make things more lively, anyhow,"
went on the old man. "And there's room and to spare, and a welcome for all."
Needless to say, d.i.c.k Selmes devoted a good deal of the intervening time to speculation on the subject of the expected arrival. Even as his host had said, "some one young" would be an acquisition, and then he wondered how old Hesketh, who seemed about a hundred, could own a niece to whom that definition applied. A grand-niece perhaps he had meant. Then, too, would she prove an acquisition? And a vision rose up within his mind of some awkward, half-educated girl brought up on just such a place as this, unused to the refinements of life, proportionately without ideas, and possibly given to affectation. Nor was Greenoak in a position to enlighten him upon the point, knowing nothing of old Hesketh's relations.
The next morning d.i.c.k Selmes was up before sunrise, and, taking his gun, went off on foot to a _hoek_ where he knew he should find a troop of wild guinea-fowl. He was successful, too, and as the splendid game birds dropped, one after another--for he had managed to break up the troop, and they were thus lying well--the keen and unmitigated enjoyment of the sport for the next half-hour was such as to leave no room for any outside thought or speculation. Picking up the seven of them he could find--two were runners, and of course without a dog were hopelessly lost--he started back homeward.
Now, seven full-grown guinea-fowl slung round one const.i.tute no light load over three miles of rough and stony ground, and by the time d.i.c.k Selmes reached the house he had had more than enough of such exercise.
When he did so reach it he became alive to the fact that a Cape cart, outspanned, with its harness hung over the splashboard, stood before the door. Now his curiosity would be satisfied.
Flinging down the birds, he entered the living-room. It was occupied by one person, a female, and she vigorously dusting.
She turned as he entered. Heavens! What was this? Red hair, a broad face thickly sown with large freckles, a wide mouth, and forty if a day!
So this was old Hesketh's niece. "Some one young" had been his definition of her, and it was she who was to make things lively by reason of the said juvenility!
"As ugly as sin," was his mental verdict. But aloud, politely, "Good morning. I must introduce myself. My name is Selmes; but--I don't think your uncle was expecting you quite so early."
The other stared.
"Ma what? Eh, but the laddie's clean daft--or is it only haverin' he is? Not but it's a braw bit laddie too"--with an approving glance at d.i.c.k's handsome face and tall proportions.
"Oh, Lord!" thought the latter, with a mental shudder. So this was the housemate who was to make them all young again with her youth and liveliness. Decidedly he must get Greenoak to invent some pretext for changing their quarters. Then the comic side struck him. Compared with himself, no doubt old Hesketh regarded this weird person, who talked broad Scotch, as "young."
"You are very energetic," he said pleasantly, for she had resumed her dusting. "Not at all tired after your trek, eh?"
"A'm never that," was the decisive reply.
"Well, your uncle will appreciate your energy at any rate. We men, left to ourselves, are sure to let things of that sort slide,"--referring to her undertaking.
"Ma--what?"
"Your uncle, Mr Hesketh."
"The laddie _is_ daft," she answered with decision. "Mon--but A have nae ony uncle."
d.i.c.k stared, and was destined to stare more in about a second. A faint rustle behind him, combined with what sounded suspiciously like a suppressed gurgle, caused him to wheel sharply round.
Framed in the doorway stood a girl--an exceedingly pretty girl. She had a sweet oval face, dark hair, and well-marked brows, and l.u.s.trous eyes to match. These now seemed sparkling and dancing with merriment.
"I am Mr Hesketh's niece," began this wholly unexpected vision of beauty. "I suppose we are here earlier than we were expected," and there was a suspicious unsteadiness in the tones, as if the speaker were gulping down an irresistible peal of laughter.
"Eh, but A do believe he's been takkin' me for yeerself, Miss Hazel,"
spoke the red-haired woman; and poor d.i.c.k, now dead certain that the new-comer had overheard the foregoing dialogue, looked and felt about as big an a.s.s as he had ever looked and felt in his life.