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All he could say in addition was, "I fear I shall ever remember Annerley too well. You will, I hope, sometimes think of me as linked to you by being a sharer of the calamity that haunts your house."
Only the commonplace remarks of life pa.s.sed afterwards between these two good men.
Mr Daveney admitted that this was clearly his duty as a soldier.
Three weary days dragged their slow length along ere the expresses arrived. The Kafirs had occupied the immediate frontier in such mult.i.tudes, that no small force could move; but now, having plundered the settlements, and disposed of their prey to their hearts' content, they had dispersed, and spread themselves along the bushy banks of the great Fish River, waiting their opportunities of crossing into the colony, which, had they known their own strength, they might have devastated from the Fish River to the sea.
The dead were decently laid out beneath the mulberry-tree, the bell swinging heavily in the oppressive air of a sultry autumn day. Here the mourners gathered round to take a last look of the uncoffined corpses of the brave. The household, with few exceptions, a.s.sembled to listen to the prayer and exhortation p.r.o.nounced by the good missionary, for the pressure of circ.u.mstances would not admit of their lingering over the grave, which was to contain all three. Then the comrades of the poor, sacrificed settlers, with muskets reversed, formed in funeral order round the bearers, and Mr Daveney having taken his place as chief mourner, the sorrowful procession wended its way to the ground which had been purchased for a chapel; and there, in sad and hurried fashion, the deep, deep grave was filled.
It was well, indeed, that the master of Annerley had provisioned his little fortress, the inmates of which amounted to forty persons, the greater proportion women and children. The defenders of the wagon barricades had saved their span-oxen, but it would have been imprudent to kill these unless driven to the necessity, as, without oxen, how were they to travel, if obliged to desert the settlement?
Daveney himself contemplated removing his family as soon as circ.u.mstances would permit; for, although the buildings were safe, a sad scene of devastation presented itself when day dawned upon it, after the terrors of the night attack--broken palisades, scattered thorn-bushes, the earth torn and b.l.o.o.d.y with the fearful struggles of men and beasts, the vineyard laid waste and trampled, a.s.segais half buried in heaps of rubbish, and sheep that had been stabbed, and left to die, running hither and thither, mutilated, and bleating piteously. The pretty trellis-work was battered to pieces, and the walls defaced with bullet-holes.
The enemy had taken his departure towards the colony, but this was only suspected, till the fourth day, when the expresses from Sir John Manvers's camp brought news of his whereabouts.
Then the younger men of the garrison sallied forth to the known fastnesses for cattle, and brought back a few foot-sore beasts, which had strayed from the rest; and the good host held a consultation with Mr Trail, on the re-organisation of the little band under a stout old settler, no longer able to ride, but quite capable of defending a post.
Marion looked from the loops of the block-house, and saw the departure of her lover and Frankfort with an aching heart. It was known beyond doubt that the Kafirs were mustering in the mountains; it was fully believed that there must be an action; and even this, with such an enemy, in such a country, could not be decisive.
She consoled herself by contrasting her own lot with that of her unfortunate sister. Frankfort had not trusted himself to a last interview with Eleanor; Ormsby's adieu had been as tender to her as to her sister. Buoyant of spirit as he was, he yet could not help admitting that the aspect of affairs was very grave.
Marion watched the two young men and their heavily-armed escort as they traversed the plain through a slanting shower of rain, so determined, that the s.p.a.ce between the sky and earth looked as if it was ruled slantwise with thick leaden lines. She could not see them long for the storm, and she was descending from her look-out to her sister's bedside, when she heard May, who was on the top of the block-house, exclaim, "More riders--more news!"
A dozen men galloped from the eastward at speed. They brought the welcome intelligence that Sir Adrian Fairfax had arrived at the mouth of the Buffalo River with reinforcements from Cape Town, and that the burghers from the upper districts had rallied round Sir John Manvers.
"Hurrah!" cried May, "we've got the Kafirs in a calabash;" and May was right--the warriors were in the mountains between the forces of the two generals; but the cattle, the great source of contention, was far eastward, under the charge of a chief professedly friendly to England.
Mr Daveney hastened to send Sir Adrian a dispatch announcing his suspicions of Lyle's confederacy with the rebel Boers, but suggested that the idea should not be mooted for the present.
The roar of cannon and the sharp rattle of musketry proclaimed to the settlers at Annerley, on the 18th of March, that the colonial forces to the westward were engaged with the Kafir warriors.
It thundered on till night; then the fiery telegraphs were lit again upon the mountain ridges--silence fell--heaven and earth grew dark again. Morning came, the sun struggled with flying mists, and again the echoes from shot and sh.e.l.l and musket reverberated from kloof to kloof, and filled the hearts of the listeners with terror and dismay.
The little bushman kept watch upon the top of the block-house from dawn till sunset, and Marion shared his vigil for hours. They were strongly contrasted, were those two beings, both fashioned by G.o.d's wise hand.
The girl young, blooming, sunny-haired, and graceful; the bushman stunted, ugly, and uncouth; nevertheless, they had many thoughts and feelings in common.
Another day was pa.s.sing, and still the battle raged; but in the afternoon there was a lull. The very elements were still, and a soft rain descended gently.
Still May and Marion kept watch together.
"Express!" shouted May.
Marion's lips were closed rigidly, her teeth chattered within; she knew not how she reached the lower apartment: her father had left it; the door stood open; the riders galloped in by the trampled vineyard paths.
"They are beaten, of course?" said Mr Daveney to the captain of the riders.
"Beaten, but not conquered," replied the latter gravely; "and we have lost--"
Marion, statue-like, appeared at her father's side.
"A hundred men and five officers," continued the burgher captain.
"We had friends in the action," said Mr Daveney, trying to be firm.
"Can you tell us if they are safe?"
"Their names, sir?"
"Frankfort and Ormsby."
"I have the list of officers killed and wounded," said the man; and first he looked in his hat, next he fumbled in his capacious pockets, then he turned his haversack round,--it was not there; examined his pouch--"No; he was afraid he had lost it." How little could he understand the agonised suspense of Marion.
He took off his wide-flapped hat again.
"See under the feather," said May.
The bushman's quick eye had detected a paper stuck in the string encircling the hat; it was the list. May s.n.a.t.c.hed it from him, and handed it to Mr Daveney.
Neither Ormsby's nor Frankfort's name was there.
Marion burst into tears of grat.i.tude and excitement.
The burgher spoke truth when he said the enemy was beaten, but not conquered. May said there were holes in the calabash, and so it was; the warrior bands were broken, but they infested the colony in all directions, walking in and out of it as it pleased them, by manifold kloofs and pa.s.ses untrod by settlers.
It was Sir John Manvers's division which had been engaged. Sir Adrian was still to the eastward, preparing to march beyond the Orange River; the messages of defiance addressed to Sir John Manvers were referred to him.
The master of Annerley, in utter dread of Lyle's reappearance at no distant period, determined on retiring, as soon as possible, to the lower and more civilised districts of the Cape Colony; and Mrs Daveney, eagerly according with his plan, prepared at once for the journey, which was to be undertaken as opportunities offered of travelling with escorts.
Meanwhile comforting letters were received from Ormsby. Frankfort had joined Sir Adrian's force. Eleanor tried to rouse herself to exertion, and the day arrived when the family was to quit Annerley for ever.
May, to his infinite joy, was, with Fitje and his child, to accompany the Daveneys.
"Be not heart-sore, missis," said he to Eleanor; "when the night gets darkest, day is nearest;" and taking the long whip from Griqua Adam, he gave the signal for departure by a loud sharp crack, that echoed like twenty whips up the kloof.
The colonists, men, women, and children, with Mr and Mrs Trail, stood at the gate of the avenue. Some begged to say "Good-bye" to the young "missis," and the curtains of the wagon were drawn aside for a minute; but those who caught sight of Eleanor turned away frightened and sorrowful at her ghastly looks, and begged the rest not to trouble her.
Her mother was beside her. Eleanor's head was pillowed on her sympathising bosom. Truly did that mother deplore her own blind, obstinate folly in trusting her unfortunate daughter's happiness to that which, had she chosen to look deeply into it, she would have seen was but a chance of well-doing after all.
Oh! how many are there who _will_ work for themselves, instead of waiting for Providence's gracious helping hand.
Mr Daveney and Marion were on horseback.
The people pressed forward to say "Farewell." Father and daughter had a hand for each, and one blue-eyed, fair-haired child would be lifted up to be kissed.
"Ah!" said an Englishwoman, "bless Miss Marion! she has no pride."
"Troth, an ye'r wrong," interposed an Irish one. "Sure it's herself that has the real pride--the pride of the lady, that knows she does not demean herself by showing the good-will to all G.o.d's creatures."